From the Back Cover:
There are the ones we try not to notice. Filthy and disoriented, they wander the streets and back alleys of America, a danger to themselves and often to the communities they haunt. Then there are the millions more we don't see, the ones who suffer behind closed doors for years, a burden only to themselves and their loved ones. Many of these end up committing suicide, or worse. There are also the tens of thousands who are currently being "warehoused" in our jails, and because of their inability to comply with even the most rudimentary codes of conduct, many receive cruel, sometimes fatal, treatment from other inmates and exasperated jail officials. And, finally, there are those who, because they are not being treated, explode with senseless violence, destroying lives, and leaving the rest of us angry, perplexed, and a little less certain about our own safety. They are our five million mentally ill, and try as we might to sweep them under the rug, they represent human tragedies and a major social problem that continues to grow in magnitude.Now, in this hard-hitting and humane exploration of the mental illness crisis in America, psychiatrist E. Fuller Torrey reveals how we have failed our mentally ill and offers a viable, provocative blueprint for change.Torrey begins by examining the consequences of our current mental illness policies on homelessness, our penal system, and the spread of violence in America. He then explores the economic, ideological, and legal reasons why, even though billions of tax dollars are spent each year on the mentally ill, they continue to receive less-than-adequate care. And finally, he proposes a three-phase approach to correcting the situation, including: cost-shifting to states as single-responsibility funders of treatment programs; commitment and involuntary treatment for those deemed incapable of making decisions for themselves; and divorcing, both ideologically and economically, serious mental illness (schizophrenia, manic-depressive illness, and other brain-based disorders) from mental health (the "worried well," and people suffering from quality-of-life and emotional problems).Out of the Shadows is a fact-filled, compellingly argued, and compassionate assessment of mental illness in America: where we are, how we got there, and where we should be going. It is essential reading for healers, policymakers, and the millions of families whose lives have been touched by serious mental illness. "Dr. Torrey has written a superb and courageous book. He stares down our dysfunctional system, fingers the culpable, and puts forth a bold yet sensible plan to rescue the thousands who wander sick and lost in a maze of failed social policies." -- Sally Satel, M.D. Yale University School of Medicine"This is Torrey's most important book yet, and every American should read it." -- H. Richard Lamb, M.D. University of Southern California School of Medicine"This moving book vividly captures the plight of the mentally ill and their families. Torrey's powerful prescription for change challenges conventional wisdom and political correctness. His searing case examples will haunt the reader." --Laurie Flynn Executive Director National Alliance for the Mentally Ill
About the Author:
about the author E. FULLER TORREY, M.D., is a research psychiatrist at the Neuroscience Center of the National Institute of Mental Health. He is also the author of twelve books, including the bestselling Surviving Schizophrenia, which has been described as the "bible" of the mentally ill and their families.
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