Elliot S. Valenstein is Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience at the University of Michigan and the author of Blaming the Brain: The Truth about Drugs and Mental Health and Great and Desperate Cures.
Andrew Herxheimer "Emberitus Fellow, United Kingdom Cochrane Centre
This book does something long overdue: It puts psychotropic drugs
into historical and scientific perspective without being too
technical. It should help prescribers and patients work together
and use these drugs more carefully.
David Healy, M.D., Ph.D. "Author of "The Antidepressant Era"
Valenstein shows how the current theories of depression and
schizophrenia arose, makes the case for them seem more persuasive
than their original proponents did, but then in devastating fashion
shows where their problems lie. More importantly, he goes on to
show why we continue to hold such beliefs that do no good for
patients, that are no longer believed by neuroscientists and that
hamper the development of more effective treatments...
Jerome Kagan, Ph.D. "Author of "Nature of the Child" and Professor
of Psychology, Harvard University Once again, Elliot Valenstein
challenges contemporary dogma -- this time by combining a lively,
informative history of the growth of psychopharmacology with a
critique of its deepest assumptions. The controversy this book will
surely provoke reflects the significance of its arguments. Those
who are friendly to or suspicious of the claim that all mental
illness is primarily a biochemical disorder will profit from this
bold, clearly written book.
Joseph LeDoux, Ph.D. "Author of "The Emotional Brain" Valenstein
swings a heavy bat at the conceptual basis of biological
psychiatry. The book will surely shock psychiatric patients and
will lead to soul searching amongst psychiatrists. Biological
psychiatry will come out of the controversy that's sure to emerge
either badly wounded or much stronger, but will never be the
same.
Michael S. Gazziniga, Ph.D. "Director, Center for Cognitive
Neuroscience, Dartmouth College Elliot Valenstein has provided us
with a fast-moving and eye-opening account of why the brain story
is but a part of the puzzle of mental illness. He has to be right.
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