People First Media program archive
Header

Austin Mardon, Order of Canada recipient, is about to receive an honourary degree for his mental health awareness work

In 1986, 24-year-old Austin Mardon was a junior field member with an international meteorite recovery expedition 170 miles from the South Pole. While his findings contributed to the advancement of science, the extreme hardships of the expedition left him mentally and physically disabled. Austin was eventually diagnosed with schizophrenia.

Since then, Austin has bravely survived many setbacks by evoking an indomitable will to make a contribution. He is recognized as a leader in advancing understanding and support for people with mental illness. (more…)

Stigma awareness, art to travel

June 9th, 2011 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Stigma awareness, art to travel)

Nanaimo artist and activist Wallace Malay will present about art, mental illness, and stigma at New York conference

A conference for organizing resistance against psychiatry will be held June 20-21, 2011 at the City University of New York. PsychOUT provides a forum for psychiatric survivors, mad people, activists, radical professionals, artists, scholars and students from around the world to share experiences of organizing against psychiatry. Collective resistance against the theories and interventions of institutional psychiatry has intensified over recent years. (more…)

Electroshock redux raises alarm

January 27th, 2011 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Electroshock redux raises alarm)

Anti-psychiatry activists respond to reports that use of ECT therapy is increasing

U.S. regulators are meeting this week, considering whether to “downgrade the risk classification of electroshock devices, reinforcing what many psychiatrists consider a deepening acceptance of electroshock in modern therapy.”  Anti-shock advocates and survivors are speaking at the hearings of the FDA, providing their personal stories and experiences.

The Canadian Psychiatric Association last year issued its first position paper on electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) since 1992, saying that ECT “should remain readily available as a treatment option.” (more…)

Not criminally responsible

November 25th, 2010 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Not criminally responsible)

Society’s response to those found not criminally responsible on account of a mental disorder

A number of Canadians have recently been found not criminally responsible for their crimes due to mental disorder. Recent high-profile—and shocking—cases include those of Vince Li in Manitoba, Rostislav Soukonnik in Alberta, Charlene Chambers and Adenir De Oliveira in Ontario, and Kimberly Ruth Noyes in B.C. Each killed while in the grip of mental illness and each was found not criminally responsible due to their mental condition at the time. (more…)

Over the edge and back

November 25th, 2010 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Over the edge and back)

How a father became delusional, killed his son, and now fights for awareness of the side effects of medications

“David Carmichael lives with loss, sorrow and stigma like no other. In 2004, he strangled his 11-year-old son, Ian. While severely depressed and taking Paxil, Carmichael became acutely psychotic and delusional—he thought Ian had suffered brain damage because of epileptic seizures and would harm others. Charged with first-degree murder, Carmichael was found not criminally responsible on account of a mental disorder.” [Source: Living with mental illness by Joanne Richard, in the Toronto Sun] (more…)

One man’s courage to come back

September 30th, 2010 | Posted by pfmarchive in uncategorized - (Comments Off on One man’s courage to come back)

Don Fraser credits family, doctors, and medications for helping him with schizophrenia

Donald Fraser was once enrolled in Surrey’s program for gifted students, active in sports, musically inclined, and popular. Years later, while at University of British Columbia, Donald experienced symptoms of schizophrenia for the first time. That began what has been described as a two-decade-long odyssey—“a roller coaster of diagnoses, institutions, a wide variety of medications and treatments, successes and failures.” Donald was diagnosed with schizophrenia and occipital epilepsy. (more…)