Marsha Linehan, founder of DBT was once diagnosed schizophrenic

It's not in the least bit surprising that one who has lived through such trauma is the one to make breakthrough discoveries in how to care for people who suffer in similar fashion.

The Illusions of Psychiatry — by Marcia Angell (former Editor in Chief of The New England Journal of Medicine)

When psychoactive drugs were first introduced, there was a brief period of optimism in the psychiatric profession, but by the 1970s, optimism gave way to a sense of threat. Serious side effects of the drugs were becoming apparent, and an antipsychiatry movement had taken root, as exemplified by the writings of Thomas Szasz and the movie One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. There was also growing competition for patients from psychologists and social workers. In addition, psychiatrists were plagued by internal divisions: some embraced the new biological model, some still clung to the Freudian model, and a few saw mental illness as an essentially sane response to an insane world. Moreover, within the larger medical profession, psychiatrists were regarded as something like poor relations; even with their new drugs, they were seen as less scientific than other specialists, and their income was generally lower.

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