There is an important post on RxISK – What’s a Life Worth?
Its author, Tracey G, like Violetta in La Traviata would not describe herself as having led a perfect life.
La Traviata is one of the all-time great operas and in Zeffirelli’s movie, with Teresa Statas, is beyond compelling – especially when Alfredo’s father steps in to castigate him for his dishonourable treatment of Violetta. See Here.
“A man who offends a woman is worthy of contempt even if at the time he is prey to a blind fury”
Honour still counted for something in 1852 when Alexandre Dumas wrote La Dame aux Camélias from which La Traviata comes.
In the light of the two posts Can Politicians Save Us and Can Politicians Save the World, Tracey’s post is eerily timely. It has triggered three letter to politicians – one of which you’ll be able to spot in her post and two more.
The posts to come throw down a gauntlet to thee political parties. Tune in here and on RxISK next week if you want to see whether honour still counts for politicians today.
Virtual Book Signings and Book Clubs?
The Covid pandemic has been an extraordinary medical event on two levels. On one level there is the disease with the host of issues linked to it from genetic susceptibility to controversial therapeutics.
There is a second political level also. The readers of posts here or on RxISK are likely keenly aware of this. Our hunch is that you are neither extreme vaccine mandators or anti-vaxx but if neither of these you likely are bewildered at the difficulty in finding a middle ground that should exist for discussing such an extraordinary event.
See Shifting Vaccine Confidence and Neo-Culturalism.
Covid and Samizdat were born at almost exactly the same time. The need that called Samizdat into being was a need to find a middle ground where health discussions could be had. A middle ground that seemed to be vanishing in front of our eyes – before Covid. A middle ground that likely most people with any interest in the complexities that medicines throw up would feel is essential to working out how to move forward. A middle ground that gets lost in crises – or whose loss leads to crises.
Anyone reading this who writes likely attempts to reach this middle ground. You may be finding it increasingly difficult to get published or heard. If you are, Samizdat may be a home for you. We have now published 6 books:
Jim Gottstein’s The Zyprexa Papers. In true Samizdat spirit this marries the consequences of company choices to individual lives and challenges readers to recognize the value of lives squashed, unnoticed, under passing company or political caravans.
Paul John Scott’s Malcharist gives an unparalleled account of what actually happens at medical conferences and what can start to happen to anyone who notices. There are likely many readers of these newsletters and posts who could write something comparable about where the corpses are.
Patrick Hahn’s Prescription for Sorrow focuses on antidepressants, the most confusing group of drugs we have. Greta Thunberg’s generation are out on the streets protesting the dumping of chemicals into the environment, while swallowing more chemicals than any previous generation – especially antidepressants. What is going on.
David Healy’s Shipwreck of the Singular and with Joanna Le Noury and Julie Wood Children of the Cure offer an overview of a dysfunctional healthcare universe. The Politics of Care Forum on this blog attempts to build on this and can do with your input.
Gottstein, Scott, Hahn and Healy can Zoom into book club or other meetings that pick up any of these books.
We can also send up virtual signings – signing whichever book you buy through the Samizdat platform or from us directly and posting it on to you. You can contact us all through david.healy@rxisk.org. In terms of book club or similar meetings we can come to arrangements for bulk buys.
Gottstein, Scott, Hahn and Healy also would love to welcome you to the Samizdat Writers Co-operative. The more of us promoting each others work, the better the chance of creating a middle ground and becoming a force to be reckoned with.
annie says
Prozac: Revolution in a Capsule | Retro Report | The New York Times
When Prozac was introduced in 1988, the green-and-cream pill to treat depression launched a cultural revolution that continues to echo.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qgCFQ5no2jg
‘treating problems we didn’t know we had’
Samizdat Health Manifesto
Manifesto
https://samizdathealth.org/sample-page/
Publishing anything – fiction or academic – in the health domain has become increasingly difficult, if the work touches on commercial interests linked to health services, pharmaceuticals, medical devices or vaccines.
Agents and Publishers can see sales in books that are pro services, drugs and devices or anti- drugs, devices and services, but neither agents nor publishers can see much of a market for anything that is neither black nor white.
This is like pharmaceutical companies faced with a first antipsychotic and later a first antidepressant who turned these drugs down because they’d never had one before and hadn’t the imagination to envisage what the possibilities might be.
Our health services are now effectively surrounded by a thicket of gatekeepers who prevent the publication of anything that might engage with our need for healthcare rather than their ability to provide health services.
chris says
Don’t think there is a middle ground when it comes to akathisia/toxic psychosis. Mass cover up and lies under cover of mental illness.
Will we find out if he was on any psych drugs…..
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9888663/Serious-tragic-incident-unfolding-Plymouth.html
chris says
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9892457/Gunman-Jake-Davison-filmed-amid-killing-spree-Plymouth.html
ADHD
“The dad even begged the mental health team to assess him”
So was/had he been on Ritalin or any amphetamine stimulant which is usually the case; something is very amiss he was allowed the gun in such circumstance especially in view of online posts
chris says
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9894151/Plymouth-killers-school-teacher-disbelief-questions-mount-handed-shotgun.html
“How is it possible that a police officer read Jake’s history of obsessive compulsive disorder, anger issues and depression and concluded he should be allowed to own a firearm?”
“Mr Williams said Davison’s autism diagnosis should also have barred him from holding a shotgun licence.”
“He spoke of his shock that the boy he once described as the ‘success story of the year’ had gone on to shoot dead five in Britain’s first ‘incel’ mass shooting”
The questions: what drugs was he on, had they been changed, had he taken himself off them suddenly….