心のハンドル操作方法 幸せに生きるための教習所

旧精神科医療は思想警察なのか?

promoting discrimination against people with mental disabilities is the Nisseikyo

2024年08月08日 | Japanese Psychiatry hospital(日本の精神科医療)

Why discrimination against people with mental disorders in Japan does not disappear

Currently, possible reasons include

① Medical Association's participation in politics and expansion of its influence

② Pharmaceutical companies' pursuit of profits through drug addiction

③ Human experiments with psychotropic drugs (development and destruction of brain function through drug therapy)

④ Denial of the spiritual world = "denial of God," "denial of the Bible," and "concealment of spiritual existence" due to the promotion of materialism.

③ and ④ are quite in-depth and may be difficult, but if you have clinical experience, they will make sense.

This is because I have seen many people who were not hospitalized due to mental disorders, but who had trouble with their families, were hospitalized, put in protective rooms, and given psychotropic drugs, and actually developed mental disorders.

Here, I would like to talk about ①.

91.5% of psychiatric hospitals in the country are private hospitals, and most of them belong to local medical associations.

When elections come, medical associations become a voting bloc, and they will nominate politicians and launch lobbying activities to create laws that are favorable to the hospital managers themselves.

80% of general hospitals other than psychiatric hospitals are private, so it is no exaggeration to say that hospital managers and medical corporation managers are putting a strain on Japan's finances.

Now, for psychiatric hospitals to operate stably, they need a reason for existence.

In developed OECD countries other than Japan, the view is that "psychiatric care is rubbish, so let's leave it to psychiatric welfare."

Their view is that psychiatric care is unnecessary except for the hyper-acute phase and criminals in a confused state.

The truth is that they don't want to waste medical expenses on psychiatric care, since it cannot solve the anxieties and worries that everyone experiences.

In Japan, psychiatric hospitals are viable thanks to the universal health insurance system and high medical care system.

However, if the public realizes that psychiatric care is a piece of crap, then the argument that psychiatric hospitals are unnecessary will arise.

If it becomes clear that psychiatric care is not treatment, not medical care, but simply a violation of human rights, as has been happening in other countries outside of Japan since the 1970s, psychiatric care will be dismantled in an instant.

In order to make effective use of closed wards and closed environments, it may be possible to return them to infectious disease wards.

The ones who will be in trouble with this are psychiatrists and hospital directors.

Psychiatrists working at public hospitals earn about 6 million yen a year, and hospital directors earn 12 million yen. (I heard this from a doctor on duty.)

I heard that if you work at a private psychiatric hospital, a mental health designated doctor earns 12 million yen, and a hospital director earns more than 24 million yen. (I heard this from the chairman of a medical corporation.)

The salary of doctors at private psychiatric hospitals is almost double that of public psychiatric hospitals.

The reason is that psychiatric hospital management is a detention business that ultimately makes a profit through low profit margins and high sales.

Mentally disabled people are independent in ADL, so sometimes they don't need manpower, and in the first place, the standard for doctors and nurses for patients is one-third the number of doctors and two-thirds the number of nurses due to the psychiatric special provisions, so labor costs can be kept low.

This is the psychiatric special provisions that were established by a notice from the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare in 1958 and are still in place today.

And to create a reason for psychiatric hospitals to continue to exist, a group of private psychiatric hospitals called the Japan Psychiatric Hospital Association makes political donations and lobbying activities.

Their method is to tell public hospitals, "Create medical observation wards and detain mentally disabled people who have committed crimes, and since mentally disabled people are unpredictable, don't argue that psychiatric hospitals and psychiatric care that have not achieved a good treatment record or therapeutic effect are unnecessary, but recognize their role as facilities for public safety and security purposes that isolate dangerous mentally disabled people."

Reprinted below.

・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・ ("The aftermath of the 'political donation' issue of the Japan Seikokyo Political Federation -- the Japan Seikokyo has begun to 'take similar actions again'" Yasuhara Shoichi, 20060110, Mental Health Care 4-41(116):93-5. last update:20150201)

1999: Japan Seikokyo Political Federation's "political donation" of about 18 million yen
May: Mental Health and Welfare Law amendment bill passed
August 10: Notice of trial of welfare home type B
2000: Federation's "political donation" of about 82 million yen (election-related expenses of 65 million yen)
March 31: Ministerial ordinance: Regarding social rehabilitation facilities, not only on-site social rehabilitation facilities but also converted hospital ward types are permitted.
June 25th: General election of the House of Representatives
November 2nd: Request for the "maintaining of the special provisions of the Medical Care Act" by the Japan Psychiatric Association
November 30th: The amendment to the Medical Care Act was passed (the so-called "psychiatric special provisions" were maintained)
2001: The federation made a "political donation" of about 26.8 million yen (about 10 million yen in election-related expenses)
January: Following Yasuoka's private study session, a joint review committee of the Ministry of Justice and the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare was launched
June: Ikeda Elementary School incident
August 2nd: Statement by the Japan Psychiatric Association calling for "special legislation for the mentally disabled who have committed crimes"
August 8th: 4 donations totaling 2 million yen to dormant political groups related to Ueno Kiminari
2002: The federation made a "political donation" of 19 million yen (there was no national election that year)
November 6th: Japan Psychiatric Association held a rally to celebrate the passage of the Medical Observation Act. 55 ruling party lawmakers participated. Deputy Minister of Health, Labor and Welfare Kimura stated that he would "try his best to get the bill passed," and received a total of 1.1 million yen in "political donations" in November and December.

December 6th: The House of Representatives Judicial Affairs Committee forced a vote on the Medical Observation Act (1 million yen "political donation" made on the same day to Shiozaki Yasuhisa, who submitted the amendment. Former Deputy Minister of Justice Nagase made a "political donation" of 5 million yen three days after the Judicial Affairs Committee passed the bill, joining a joint review with the Judicial Affairs Committee (later returning the money, saying it was "misunderstood").

2003: The federation made a "political donation" of 1.5 million yen (the "Nippon Seishun Kyokai political donation issue" was widely covered in the Diet and various media. The general election for the House of Representatives was held in November).

May 19th: A five-member user group filed criminal charges with the Tokyo District Public Prosecutors Office against three secretaries to Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Ueno Kiminari for violating the Political Funds Control Act. June 3rd: The House of Councillors Judicial Affairs Committee preliminary hearing. "Sneak attack and forced vote" without warning

July 1st: User files criminal charges for bribery along with Yoshio Kimura and an unnamed member of the Japan Seikokyo Association.

July 10th: The Medical Observation Bill is passed at the House of Representatives plenary session.

2004: Political donations to the Federation: 16 million yen (see October 1st report in the Mainichi Shimbun).

2005: Political donations to the Federation: unknown at this time. September 11th: General election for the House of Representatives (LDP wins by a landslide).

July 15th: Medical Observation Law is forced into force.

October: The Support for Persons with Disabilities Act is passed.

・・・ ... They have incredible collusion with politicians.

The Japanese Psychiatric Hospital Political Federation is the political organization of the Japanese Psychiatric Hospital Association (JPA).

Psychiatric care is a field that should be the responsibility of welfare, so this field of care that is so ineffective should be "unnecessary" and "dismantled and reduced."

However, of the national medical expenses of 43 trillion yen in 2019, about 2 trillion yen (1.9 trillion yen, of which about 1.5 trillion yen was for hospitalization) was spent on tax money for mental health and welfare.

A lot of that tax money is still being paid for hospitalization expenses.

The average length of stay in a psychiatric hospital in the OECD is about 14 days.

As of 2019, Japan had 28 It's the 5th.

The number of psychiatric hospital beds per 100,000 people is also the highest, with 320,000 beds, far ahead of the rest.

Psychiatric hospitals can continue to exist even though they have not achieved any therapeutic effect by "continuing to promote discrimination against the mentally disabled."

In fact, after the Ikeda Elementary School incident in Osaka in 2001, Junichiro Koizumi caused controversy by saying, "You never know what the mentally disabled will do."

・・・ ... The incident did not only hurt the people involved. People with mental disabilities who are trying desperately to integrate into their communities all over the country have also been deeply hurt by further discrimination and prejudice, as voices grow louder that this is why people with mental disabilities are dangerous. I believe that Prime Minister Koizumi was the leader in this.
At a Health, Labor and Welfare Committee meeting on June 20th of last year, less than two weeks after the incident, I criticized Prime Minister Koizumi's words and actions immediately after the incident.
The day after the incident, before a psychiatric evaluation of the suspect had even been conducted and the details of the incident were still unknown, Prime Minister Koizumi said, "Even when people with mental problems are arrested, it is becoming increasingly common for them to return to society and commit terrible crimes like that," and instructed Secretary-General Yamazaki to consider revising the Criminal Code. When I asked Minister Sakaguchi about his opinion on this statement, he replied, "I think what Prime Minister Koizumi said was a general statement about what to do in the case of mentally disabled people who commit serious crimes, but given the circumstances, it may have caused a great deal of misunderstanding."

・・・ ... While psychiatrists are working to "eliminate discrimination and stigma against the mentally ill," they are also lobbying politicians behind the scenes, propagandizing that "we don't know what the mentally ill will do, so we must not let them go unchecked, and therefore we must not rush to reduce the number of psychiatric hospitals and psychiatric beds."

This time, we looked at psychiatric care, but in fact, most medical care in Japan is policy-based care.

The global war ended in 1945.

However, the Illuminati, who want to continue making money and plundering wealth, may have shifted from the war business to the health anxiety business, trying to make a killing in medical care.

It is no coincidence that the president of the Japanese Psychiatric Hospital Association let his true feelings slip.

『精神病院経営は牧畜業 精神障害者差別を助長しているのは日精協(日本精神科病院協会)である
2022年01月29日 https://blog.goo.ne.jp/ikemenmassan/e/5efefe87ce57cbd3673bd466c288d2b5 を翻訳』

 

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