The Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) brought its award-winning Traveling Exhibit to Old Sacramento over Independence Day weekend, using the occasion to prompt reflection on the protection of human rights within mental health care. The exhibit, presented from July 4th through the weekend, aimed to educate visitors on principles of individual liberty, informed consent, and fundamental rights in healthcare.
Through historical documentation and educational displays, the exhibit examined controversial psychiatric practices, including coercive treatment and involuntary commitment. According to CCHR research, an individual is involuntarily committed to a psychiatric facility somewhere in the world approximately every 30 seconds. In the United States, David Cohen, Professor of Social Welfare at the Luskin School of Public Affairs, reported that involuntary psychiatric detentions have increased at a rate roughly three times faster than population growth in recent years. A study published in The American Journal of Psychiatry, using 2014 data, found that involuntary hospitalizations accounted for 54 percent of admissions to psychiatric inpatient facilities. CCHR maintains that once committed, individuals may be subjected to psychiatric treatment without meaningful recourse.
“Independence Day reminds us that freedom should never be taken for granted,” said a local CCHR representative. “Our goal is to educate the public about safeguarding personal rights and ensuring that no individual is deprived of dignity, informed consent, or due process.”
The event featured keynote speakers including Eric Eisenhammer, CEO of Dauntless Communications, and Stacy Anderson, Executive Board Member of the National African American Civil Rights Organization. Drawing from his own experiences with the mental health system, Eisenhammer expressed appreciation for CCHR’s work. “Thank you, CCHR, for the incredible work you do every day—educating, intervening, and giving people their lives back. I’m deeply grateful.”
Anderson focused her remarks on informed consent and every individual’s right to receive complete information before making decisions about mental health treatment. Referencing Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s iconic “I Have a Dream” speech, Anderson shared her own vision for the future. “I have a dream for mental health justice. I carry a dream where mental health care does not open one up to harm, does not silence, and does not stigmatize. This exhibit shines a light on people who were unheard, mistreated, overmedicated, or denied their rights. I dream of a future where those stories are no longer possible.”
For more information, visit the CCHR website, or watch documentaries on the work of CCHR volunteers in countries around the world and the film Psychiatry: An Industry of Death on the Scientology Network.
Founded in 1969 by psychiatrist Dr. Thomas Szasz and the Church of Scientology, the Citizens Commission on Human Rights is an international mental health watchdog dedicated to investigating and exposing human rights abuses in the field of mental health. Its commissioners include physicians, psychiatrists, psychologists, attorneys, legislators, government officials, educators, and civil rights advocates. CCHR states that its work is inspired by author, humanitarian, and Scientology Founder L. Ron Hubbard’s commitment to ending physically harmful practices in mental health.
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