Showing posts with label social workers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social workers. Show all posts

Monday, November 11, 2013

Measuring ghosts

MEASURING GHOSTS
     A recent article in Science Translational Medicine asks the question "Can We Measure Autism ?" To my mind this begs the question, "is there really something called "autism" that we should be trying to measure ?". The authors Isaac S. Kohane and Alai Eran inadvertently make the case in the negative. They first of all note the controversy that recent changes in the "psychiatric Bible", the DSM, have provoked. To their credit they mention the "changes in funding" behind some of the debate, though they stop short of a robust criticism of the "mental illness complex" as a money making industry. They also mention how the DSM classifications "strike at the heart of our own identities as autonomous human beings" without going on to criticize the whole enterprise as a method whereby some people exercise power over others. Finally they admit the obvious, that mental health "diseases" simply don't have the "robust and definitive" criteria that is demanded in other fields of medicine.

     The authors, however, are reformers rather than abolitionists. They lay out a series of criteria for diagnosing autism spectrum disorder (the present fashionable name). These would include 1)agreement of the key features of a disorder/disease, 2)agreement on how such features are to measured clinically and 3)a pathway from such measurements to a clinical label that provides useful information on both prognosis and treatment, including estimates of the effectiveness of such treatment. They admit that, "Until recently, ASD diagnoses did not meet most of these criteria.".

     Are the more "recent" criteria any better ? The authors go on to honestly admit that even "expert" (let alone the way that autism is usually diagnosed) ways of diagnosing (labelling ?) autism are wildly variable, and they admit the possibility and even likelihood "do not impart sufficient diagnostic or prognostic accuracy to be clinically useful". Mind you these are the efforts of the recent experts. They also admit the "remarkable individual differences" in response to such interventions. Without, of course, ever invoking the need for evidence based medicine. What is the natural course of the so-called disease if people don't work on it and its carrier ? What is the natural rate of recovery ?

     The authors mention the large body of research in real scientific fields about the supposed causes of "autism", and they edge close to saying that supposed "co-morbidities" may in  fact reflect that autism is, in fact, many different things masquerading under a label that is-my opinion- financially convenient for a large number of "people manipulators". They also state that verifying such research will require a much larger data analysis than has been done to date. The authors have great hopes that the diagnosis of "autism" will be improved through a thorough analysis and combination of the objective signs being investigated (as opposed to the subjective way that the label is presently applied). Their hopes are that coming to a diagnostic decision about autism will more closely resemble real medicine like the diagnosis of heart disease where many lines of evidence are considered. They do, however, admit reality, that "the multimodal approach remains untested".

     Kohane and Eran end their editorial with their vision of a wide data connection net that might actually make autism diagnosis an objective and useful enterprise. They, as reformers, make their bows to the various institutions which presently profit from autism - "research, clinical care, school, home". After mentioning holy four they give an afterthought to "individuals, with their consent". The mind boggles at the thought of a child or adolescent facing such a gathering of power having enough will and guile to escape their kindly embrace without bringing down the inevitable punishment hidden behind the mask of caring. It is significant that they end their essay by calling for data sharing amongst the holy four. The "patient" is left out of the loop here.

     I have to admit that the reforms being proposed can seem quite attractive. They are, however, fitted into a mindset that accepts both the power of this branch of the psychiatric industry and some underlying reality to the label presently being used. While not being an expert I can read the studies being done and recognize some glaring problems with them. An historical scepticism seems in order. I have an old medical book from the 1930s in my library that parses out over 20 different forms of the mental disease called "masturbation". The idea that there was no such disease would have seemed perverse (pun !) to the author. Nowadays the author himself would be the perverse one.

     Psychology and psychiatry are not sciences in any non-ideological sense of the term beyond some rather basic findings. These are where real science is done in these disciples. The rest is very much smoke and mirrors, the smoke coming from the burning of huge piles of public money and small piles of private money spent by those who want to fill their time with useless and usually painful pursuits. The way I see it "autism" is very much like the label "schizophrenic". Both labels conceal a reality of many, many, many different real diseases under a useless generalization. I don't doubt that both schizophrenics and autistics contain large populations that do have legitimate diseases, but the popularity of a catch-all label impedes both diagnostic and therapeutic efforts to deal with these matters. For instance many labelled "autistic" may indeed have gastrointestinal upsets. BUT giving them a secondary diagnosis of autism means that the real problem remains unaddressed. The signs become the focus rather than the cause.

     Ignoring real diseases and "treating" things that are nothing but misplaced words is like putting problems down to demonic possession and imagining that rituals of exorcism are some sort of "treatment". There is finally the question of whether there is anything wrong at all in at least some cases. I'm not of the opinion that labels like autistic or schizophrenic don't disguise at least some real medical problems- many not one. There is, however, the example of masturbation that I mentioned above. In that case the whole intricate system of medical (and popular) superstition was utterly false. How much of what is now described by psychiatric labels is also totally imaginary ? How much is also much better dealt with by literature or philosophy rather than "medicine" ?

     That is the sort of question I would like to leave with the reader. That is why I think that attempts to reform a modern witchhunt by increased rigour are very much asking us to "measure ghosts".

Saturday, September 26, 2009


CANADIAN POLITICS-VANCOUVER:
VANCOUVER-SALLY ANN VERSUS SEX TRADE WORKERS:
There's quite a little storm brewing up out on the west coast as the Salvation Army is being taken to task by the Sex Industry Worker Safety Action Group. As the 2010 Winter Olympics approach it is expected that, like most other high profile sporting events across the world, there will be an influx of sex trade workers hoping to take advantage of the opportunity. Some (most) will indeed be exploited by various sorts of pimps, and all be be exposed to possible violence from their customers. The nature of the dispute detailed in an article from the Vancouver Sun below is whether ads that have been posted by the Salvation Army are or are not offensive to those people who work in the sex trade. Molly has to admit that she has trouble in 'taking a side' on this issue. The ads indeed are monumentally useless, at least as useless as the 'weekend of prayer' that Sally Ann proposes as part of its campaign. I seriously doubt that any imagery, no matter how graphic, will tell anybody anything about this issue that they don't know already. Neither will it influence anybody in any part of the equation of this matter to act any differently at all. Unless, of course, it more of less actually encourages those who have violent tendencies to act out against sex trade workers. That, unfortunately is a possibility. On the other hand the 'Safety Action group' is actually a social workerish collection more or less set up by the Vancouver City Police, and its motives are equally suspect as those of the Sally Ann. If there is any solution at all it lies in the dual actions of legalizing prostitution and of actually forming unions of sex trade workers. Such unions actually exist in numerous cities across North America and in Europe. They are even present in parts of the 'Third World'. Their success level varies of course, but they are a much better alternative than throwing more money at head shrinking prostitutes. Anyways, here's the article.
CPCPCPCPCPCPCP
Sex trade workers decry Salvation Army posters:
Graphic images wrongly portray them as slaves, they say
By Kelly Sinoski, Vancouver Sun
Sex trade workers are decrying a Salvation Army campaign against human trafficking that depicts them as slaves and victims of brutal violence.

The “Truth Isn’t Sexy” campaign, developed and launched last year by Mercer Creative, has started to raise the ire of sex workers, who say they are appalled at graphic images of women being throttled or having their heads bashed against a sidewalk.

The images can be seen around Metro Vancouver on billboards, in public washrooms and on transit shelters.

“[Sex workers] are raising some concerns over the fact the campaign perpetuates the myth of sex workers being slaves,” said Tamara O’Doherty, of the Sex Industry Worker Safety Action Group.

“They’re traumatized. ... For some of these people who work on the streets, they do experience violence,” O’Doherty said. ( And do such ads have either no effect or do they actually encourage such violence-Molly )

The Salvation Army acknowledged the images are graphic but said the campaign is designed to tell the true stories of sexual trafficking victims.

Spokesman Brian Venables said the campaign wasn’t aimed at all sex trade workers, but rather those who were kidnapped or brought into Vancouver against their will.

“When we came together to create this we decided first and foremost it had to be the truth,” he said.

“It’s about people who don’t have that liberty any more; they lost the right to make choices.

“Yes, the images are violent and for the Salvation Army it’s a bold, bold step, but we wanted to make an impact.”

The campaign is aimed at raising awareness about human trafficking and exploitation ahead of the 2010 Olympic Games, when the Salvation Army says “the demand for bodies to service the sex trade will increase. So will the number of victims.”

The Salvation Army website claims Vancouver is a major port of entry for international sex slaves and that nearly every prostitute in the Downtown Eastside is somehow indebted to a pimp or gang, and thus lives in a form of bondage.

Venables said he hopes the graphic images will help put a face on human trafficking.

But the Sex Industry Worker Safety Action Group Vancouver claims the campaign is “misleading, debasing to women and nothing short of sensational.”

O’Doherty said sex workers are worried about exploitation and want to work with the Salvation Army on the issue. The focus, she said, should be on making the community safer for sex workers.

The group launched its opposition to the campaign on the eve of the Salvation Army’s Weekend of Prayer for Victims of Sex Trafficking, today through Sunday.

Venables said the Salvation Army would appreciate any help from sex workers and hopes the debate will bring them all together.

“This is much bigger than the Salvation Army,” he said.

“We need the whole community. These people are on the streets and they can be a huge resource.”
ksinoski@vancouversun.com

Wednesday, August 26, 2009


CANADIAN ANARCHIST MOVEMENT-TORONTO:
STOP TORONTO'S PAN-AM BID:
The following came to Molly's attention via the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty (OCAP). It originates with a new coalition, the No Games Toronto group.
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Sunday and Monday: Stop The Bid for the Pan Am Games:‏
The money budgeted to be spent on the Pan Am Games in Toronto could repair every unit in TCHC, raise social assistance rates for everyone in the province and have money left over for other important social spending. In addition to being a waste of money, the City will use the games as an excuse to speed up gentrification and socially cleanse our neighborhoods. Vancouver has seen the displacement and/or criminalization of thousands of poor people because of the Olympics. We will fight to make sure the same doesn't happen here!
OCAP is calling on our members and supporters to join in this coalition action against the games.
*No Games Toronto - Stop the bid for the 2015 Games!*
*Pan Am Sports Organization (PASO) coming to town to decide on bid*
*Sunday, August 30th
11 a.m. to evening
No Games Flying Squad Bus
we will visit a few of the venues
Meet 11 a.m. @ APUS
100 Devonshire Place (across from the Uof T Varsity Stadium)
*RALLY to stop the Games!
*Monday August 31, 11:00 a.m.
100 Devonshire Place
across from the Uof T Varsity Stadium
Call out to the community to join us at the APUS office, the site of the $50million Pan Am venue that will displace the part-time union. We will have speakers, free food and information on why we need to resist the bid! The estimated cost for the Pan-Am games in Toronto is already set at $2.4 billion.
Yet, the most vulnerable and marginalized people are told that there isn’t enough money to assist them. All, three levels of government and the U of T have pledged either tens, or hundreds of millions into the Pan-Am Games. Meanwhile, there are more urgent priorities like public housing, keeping our schools and pools open and affordable post-secondary education.
This year, while planning for two Olympic Size sports facilities, costing upwards of $220 million for the Pan Am games, the University of Toronto raised tuition across the board. In addition, they introduced an unprecedented Flat Fee that will increase tuition for part-time students as much as 66%. One venue, the Centre for High Performance Sport, will displace the Uof T part-time student union.
If these plans go ahead, students will be expected to pay additional levies for both venues. Twice in the past, the people of Toronto have been successful in preventing the Olympics from coming to town (i.e. 1996 and 2008 games). We stopped it then and we can do it again! Mega-Sporting events wreak havoc on their host cities, displacing marginalized people, shutting down sectors of the city, bankrupting small businesses, demanding a large police presence, and in the end leave the city billions in debt. We only need to look to Vancouver, which is scheduled to host the 2010 Olympic Games.
What was originally supposed to cost only $660 million is now projected at $6 billion. With six months before the games begin there are already massive violations of civil liberties and homelessness has substantially increased.
When the Pan American Sports Organization (PASO) comes to town there will be a two-day marathon of wining, dining, and showing off, where officials from all three levels of government will attempt to impress the five-member evaluation committee to secure Toronto’s 2015 Pan-Am bid.
No Games Toronto,a coalition of community activists, plan to show our opposition on the 30thand 31st by letting PASO know their games are not welcome here. Join our rally
Monday 31st at 11 a.m.
100 Devonshire Place
and the flying squad No Pan Am Games
Bus - Sunday Aug 30th, 11 a.m. to evening (the bus leaves from same location).
Send PASO the message that Toronto has more relevant priorities than Mega-Sporting events. *More information:
**
Ontario Coalition Against Poverty
10 Britain St.
Toronto, ON
M5A 1R6
416-925-6939
**
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MOLLY NOTE:
I really have to speak up here to make my own position clear. To begin with let me say that I am in total agreement with any opposition to statist spectacles such as the Olympics or the Pan-Am Games. That goes without saying. At the same time I am not a leftist with a crude knee jerk reaction against any and all sport. I have a great suspicion that much of the opposition to the Olympics and the Pan-Am Games comes from a subculture that I am not only not part of but that I know is engaging in behavior that is good for building the subculture but lousy for attaining the presumed goals. Personally I think that athletic contests are actually a worthy enterprise while many leftist activities are not. Let's go further. My father was boxing champion of Québec in his weight class. Was he wrong to go for this title ? As for myself I am a champion of nothing. I did, however, once break the four minute mile. Nothing short of a miracle to anyone who knows Molly and her actual stature. Mind you my lungs burned for two weeks. Will power versus reality. Some years later at Olympia in Greece I actually booted up and down the traditional course (without timing it). I cannot express how good it felt. If I would suggest anything to do before you die this would be one of the things. God knows how Olympia looks after the recent 2007 fires, but it was beauty incarnate when we were there.
Life is short. I've recently been reminded of this once more. In this brief transit from oblivion to oblivion taking pleasure whenever you can is not a vice. It should actually be a commandment. Quite frankly I often cringe at the statements of my leftist confreres about certain things. Sport happens to be one of these cringe-inducing subjects. Once more, the spectacles of nationalism involved in such things as the Olympics or the Pan-Am Games are repulsive, and their holding is a waste of money. Yet....by what alchemy is it presumed that money spent on such games will automatically rebound to the benefit of the poor if it is not spent on such spectacles. This is not quibbling. I don't think it should be spent-period. But I seriously doubt that any such monies saved would ever be spent for the direct advantage of the poor.
Should such monies actually be diverted to so-called "social spending" there is a "hard question" that will eventually have to be faced by anarchists, if not by the average leftist who would see no problem. Is there a "trickle down" economy such that every dollar thrown at a social service bureaucracy and that part of the ruling class and the working class whose product is social control will benefit the actual so-called "clients". If so by what percentage. Is one dollar of social spending equal to 1 dollar of benefit, nothing, 10 cents or 50 cents of benefit to the poor ? How much in each case. At what point do you say "no". Some things are easy. So-called psychotherapy or "counselling" (the new bureaucrateze for the the dollar store version) is obviously worthless and a simple con. Most things, however, are much more complex.
All of this gets back to the idea of celebrations, of deliberate waste of resources that produce "public joy" as something that is actually worth supporting and having. To my great shame it is a semi-Marxist social democrat who has written the best book on why we should appreciate such "useless" celebrations. Barbara Ehrenreich's 'Dancing in the Street' is, to my mind, the best corrective to leftist (and anarchist) puritanism that I have ever seen. The problem with so-called "anarchist" correctives is that they are usually far more moralistic, arrogant and pseudo-elitist (see primitivism and post leftism) that that which they criticize. But how should I know ? I have never tried to claim some great differentiation from the "great unwashed". My own small life is enough for me, and I have no other ambitions.
Celebrations ! Athletics ! As I said I think that they are a worthy ambition for a noble human. Way back when this would not have seemed such an outré opinion. In 1936 left wing parties and unions, led by the Spanish CNT, proposed to hold a 'People's Olympiad' in Barcelona from July 19th to July 26th. This was to be in opposition to the Berlin Olympics of 1936, the "fascist Olympics". The proposal, where Germany and Italy were to be represented by exile athletic groups, was overtaken by events ie the Spanish Revolution which began on July 17 1936. This Olympiada Popular would also have featured competitions in chess, folkdancing, music and theatre, mirroring, in a way, the ancient Olympiads.
All that Molly can ask to those who pretend to the name of anarchism today is "what is wrong with this" ? Do we aspire to the grey "equality" of the liberal/leftist vision where competition and excellence in every field except manipulation !!!!!! and lies!!!!! is condemned and punished ? Or are we wise enough to put our politics beyond pop-psychology and the bureaucracies that it supports and see what people actually are and want.
Sigh!!!! Never again will I run the course at Olympia unless I am sure that I am dying. If I was I'd probably try to run the run that ended at Marathon, and I'd be happy to die in its course like the original runner did. But I hear that the land developers have committed arson that threatens Marathon this year. So sad.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008


CANADIAN POLITICS
REAL CHANGE NEEDED AT WOMEN'S SHELTERS IN CANADA:
The following article, a report on a conference held this March 8, International Women's Day, in Toronto was originally published in Rabble.Ca yesterday. It has been reprinted at the Autonomy and Solidarity site(see out Links section). What Molly finds most significant about the article is that it actually at least partially "names the beast" for the problems. I find this significant because one would hardly expect a gathering of "professional leftists" to be so self-critical. One would expect an unanimous call for more money only spiced with a dash of infighting over "who is the most oppressed". That is the sad state of "the left" today.
Molly has little problem with the main thrust of the article ie that degree-ed social workers act as "social control agents" rather than helpers, and that the management of battered women's shelters would be best left to the women themselves rather than social workers. Molly would only disagree with the implication that this situation can be reformed in a manner accommodating to all sides. Make no mistake about it. There are sides here. For decades now Molly has held to a much more complex "class analysis" than that usually held by "the left". In this viewpoint that part of the working class whose product is social control has to be seen as a separate class from others whose product is different. Similarly, the bosses of these workers have to be seen as a separate part of the ruling class, one part of the class that rules by directing the labour of others. A manager in a social work bureaucracy who controls the work life of 50 people, a principal in a school who has a similar amount of underlings are much more part of a ruling class than the boss of a small workplace with ten employees. Through their underlings such people rule the lives of hundreds of people, lives that their employees attempt to direct. But this strays from the point. Here's the article. I have added one aside where it appeared to me that there was an obvious typo.


Canada's shelters for abused women have an appalling framework, argued a group of panelists gathered on International Women's Day (IWD) in Toronto, as they described the dysfunction behind the shelter walls. The event was called Transforming Shelters Beyond Protection and was moderated by Judy Rebick, CAW Sam Gindin Chair in Social Justice and Democracy at Ryerson University.

With over 500 shelters across Canada, 152 in Ontario alone, meant to protect women suffering from mental health issues, drug problems and especially those suffering from domestic violence, the current framework that these shelters operate within does a great disservice to these women.

The panelists explained that shelters are increasingly employing professionals with degrees in social work to protect abused women. However, professionals don't carry any firsthand experience of the violence that is inflicted on women. Central to the revitalizing and transforming of shelters is the involvement of survivors of domestic violence as employees. The urgency in these survivors is more compelling than the education of social work professionals. What needs to happen is for current employers(This must mean "employees", and even that is bad enough as it leaves the same people in control after an assumed "conversion experience" via "political re-education") to be re-educated and re-trained on the issue.

"Credentials set up an artificiality about who can do what," said Akua Benjamin, director of the School of Social Work at Ryerson University.

The Ontario Association of Interval and Transition Houses (OAITH) often provides training to shelter staff to enhance the equality of women, but ever since the five percent funding cuts to shelters and 21.6 percent cuts to social assistance and housing subsidies in 1995, resources are less available to get abused women and their children out of danger. In addition, funding for counseling in second stage housing programs was completely eliminated. Shelters reported that as a result of the new reductions, women were returning to their abusive partners.

The cuts came after women's equality services increased significantly under the Ontario NDP government in 1990. Social program spending became increasingly criticized during an economic recession, and under the then newly elected Progressive Conservative government many women's programs took a dive.

"Because we got so much power at one point and women of colour started to lead the movement, they shut us out," said Rebick.

"The Women's Movement did not isolate itself from politics. Politics marginalized us," Rebick added.

The other flaw that speakers at the event pointed to in the shelters' current framework is its relationship with the child welfare sector. Women's shelters and child welfare are two systems that are not always in agreement, especially since funding for child welfare has doubled since 1995. When child exposure was included as "family violence" within the Ontario Child and Family Services Act in March 2000, women became the source of blame for children who witnessed violence.

In 2003, 34 percent of women in abusive relationships were charged by child welfare for failing to "protect their child." The problem, panelists argued, is that the child welfare system lacks a women-centred approach to violence against women, which compromises the protection of women. According to the Statistics Canada Transition Home Survey in 2004, 88 percent of dependent children reside in shelters to escape abuse.

The current framework of these shelters means that they work more as social control agents that regulate, rather than protect and care. Women are denied entry into shelters for many reasons, most of them due to their immigration status, their mental health and if they have children. The lack of resistance to these regulations weakens the potential for shelters to protect and empower women in an anti-oppression framework.

Women often come to shelters because of abuse and because they have been ravished by poverty, racism, sexism or homophobia. With no national framework to deal with violence against women, women themselves are the only ones who can fight for an anti-oppression framework and ensure that shelters focus on equity and protection.