(4-12-21) Involuntary Commitment is a topic that stirs strong opinions and feelings. I asked Dinah Miller, a Baltimore, Maryland, psychiatrist, and co-author of Committed: The Battle Over Involuntary Psychiatric Care to react to last week’s blog written by Cheryl Nimtz.
What I Discovered When I Investigated Involuntary Care
By Dr. Dinah Miller.
“But, if I had not had the good fortune of being involuntarily committed and put on one tiny pill, I would still be homeless begging on the streets, in prison with little or no treatment, caught in human trafficking, swallowed by drug addiction or dead.” ~Cheryl Nimtz on Pete Earley’s Blog
It is nice to have Cheryl Nimtz come forward to share her stories, a story of how psychiatrists have helped her.
For 12 years, I wrote a blog with Drs. Anne Hanson and Steve Daviss called Shrink Rap that we began after publishing our book by the same name. We would write, and when the topic turned to forced or involuntary treatment, the comments invariably got very heated.
There was so much about the horrors of involuntary care, and it was through blogging that I discovered how psychiatry’s efforts on behalf of people with episodes of severe mental illness can be traumatizing.
We would hear from people like Cheryl too — people whose lives were chaotic, who were in imminent danger, who had been hallucinating, delusional, or remarkably disorganized and who presented a danger to themselves or others, who were then hospitalized and got better.Click to continue…






