Popular on TelAve
- Advantage Marketing Launches 3-Minute Assessment to Help SMBs Diagnose and Fix Marketing Gaps - 105
- Card makers turn to Pink and Main for tools to support their craft
- Evermore Bliss Launches AI Wedding Speech Writer to Help Users Create Personalized, Heartfelt Toasts
- Mensa Brings National Board Game Competition to Northern Virginia April 16-19
- Acuvance Appoints Sandeep Sabharwal to Board of Directors, Strengthening Leadership to Support Continued Platform Growth
- Special Alert! Highly Undervalued Stock: $317M Revenue in 2025 for Telecom Leader IQSTEL, Inc. (N A S D A Q: IQST)
- Instant IP Launches Rapid Takedown Service to Combat IP Theft, Deepfakes, and Copycat Websites
- As Global Tensions Rise, Demand Grows for Private Spaces to Process Thoughts and Speak Freely Online
- Expert Law Attorneys' Top Law Firms to Know: March 2026
- Mac Mountain Selects netElastic vRouter for LightCraft Broadband-as-a-Service Platform
Similar on TelAve
- 5,521 College Athletes Launch Own Merch Stores in Just 30 Days on AthleteMerch.com, Reaching 7,975 Live Storefronts Nationwide
- Free Critical Illness Claim Calculator Launches to the Public
- HRC Fertility Celebrates Beverly Hills Grand Opening, Spotlighting Fertility Care as Women's Health Month Begins
- HRC Fertility's Dr. Christo G. Zouves Appointed to San Mateo County Medical Association Board of Directors
- HealthBook+ and Stonebrook Risk Solutions Partner to Bring Predictive Intelligence to Healthcare Risk
- CCHR: 'Plant-Based' Psychedelics Push Masks Synthetic Drugs and Billion-Dollar Profits
- NRx Pharmaceuticals (N A S D A Q: NRXP) Accelerates Into National Spotlight as Manufacturing Launch, Federal Policy & AI-Driven Breakthroughs Converge
- Intuitive Flow Systems Launches Mokēd Meditation Whistle
- More Life Summit 2026 Announces Gary Brecka & Mr. Olympia Derek Lunsford as First Speakers for Miami Event
- Viasat, Galaxy 1 Communications and L2 Aviation to bring avionics integration to Advanced Air Mobility
Forced Psychiatric Hospitalization Fails Vulnerable People: CCHR Urges Repeal Amid Rising U.S. Policies
TelAve News/10891470
U.S. policies targeting homelessness revive coercive practices with no proven benefits—while global models show non-coercion methods succeed and lower costs.
LOS ANGELES - TelAve -- By CCHR International
As U.S. policies increasingly promote involuntary psychiatric commitment for homeless populations following a July 2025 executive order, the Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR) warns that expanding coercive psychiatry violates human rights and lacks proven benefits.[1] CCHR calls for ending involuntary commitment and forced treatment, urging adoption of rights-respecting alternatives already succeeding internationally.
Coercive psychiatry overrides autonomy without evidence of benefit, the group says. The U.S. Supreme Court affirms that "involuntary commitment to a mental hospital, like involuntary confinement of an individual for any reason, is a deprivation of liberty…."[2]
Unlike limited-consent court-mandated options, involuntary treatment is administered against a person's will, with duration set by court order and state law.[3]
Studies show no clear therapeutic or protective value from coercion, and mounting evidence reveals harm:
High restraint use persists in the U.S.; for example, at Washington, D.C.'s St. Elizabeth's Hospital (averaging 72 restraints per month in 2025). In June 2025 alone, staff used restraints 118 times, nearly four times per day, according to city data.[7]
An estimated 1.2 million Americans face involuntary psychiatric hospitalization yearly, exposing them to these risks.[8]
More on TelAve News
CCHR points to non-coercive models that exist. Recovery Innovations (RI), Inc.'s "No Force First" policy (2006) recognizes that traditional mental health service models produced poor outcomes. The program limits force to true last-resort emergencies after exhaustive review. In a two-year study of 12,346 cases (32% involuntary arrivals, 44% substance abuse), chemical restraint occurred in only 0.45%—far below state averages—with no seclusion or mechanical restraints during the study period. RI notes that "the highest price of all is the price paid by the people who are restrained: their recovery is stalled by a practice that can disempower them, break their spirit, and reignite a sense of helplessness and hopelessness."[9]
The Council of Europe's 2021 Compendium of Good Practices to Promote Voluntary Measures in Mental Health highlights reductions in coercion:
In another example:
Jan Eastgate, CCHR International president, stated, "These show there can be sustained investment in approaches that can eliminate coercion without compromising safety. Alternatively, expanding involuntary commitment expands dangerous state-psychiatric power over vulnerable people, diverting billions to ineffective institutional hospitalization and forced treatment, increasing long-term costs."
CCHR urges repealing involuntary commitment laws, ending coercive practices, and embracing global trends toward eliminating forced psychiatry in favor of voluntary, humane mental health care.
CCHR was established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and renowned professor of psychiatry, Dr. Thomas Szasz, who explained: "It is dishonest to pretend that caring coercively for the mentally ill invariably helps him, and that abstaining from such coercion is tantamount to 'withholding treatment' from him. Every social policy entails benefits as well as harms. Although our ideas about benefits and harms vary from time to time, all history teaches us to beware of benefactors who deprive their beneficiaries of liberty…. There is neither justification nor need for involuntary psychiatric interventions…."[12]
More on TelAve News
Sources:
[1] Susan E. Collins, "What decades of research reveal about involuntary substance use treatment – and why evidence points elsewhere," The Conversation, 2 Mar. 2026, theconversation.com/what-decades-of-research-reveal-about-involuntary-substance-use-treatment-and-why-evidence-points-elsewhere-268841
[2] O'Connor v. Donaldson, 422 U.S. 563 (1975), www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/422/563
[3] Susan E. Collins, The Conversation, 2 Mar. 2026
[4] Leoni Grossmann et al., "Suicide after Involuntary Psychiatric Care: A Nationwide Cohort Study in Sweden," The Lancet Regional Health – Europe 60 (2026): 101504, www.thelancet.com/journals/lanepe/article/PIIS2666-7762(25)00296-0/fulltext
[5] Natalia Emanuel, et al., "A Danger to Self and Others: Health and Criminal Consequences of Involuntary Hospitalization," Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Reports, no. 1158, July 2025, www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/media/research/staff_reports/sr1158.pdf?sc_lang=en
[6] "Explore our database of 14K hospital restraint deaths in U.S. Where did they happen?" Yahoo! News, 18 July 2024, www.yahoo.com/news/explore-database-14k-hospital-restraint-070117869.html, citing: David Robinson, "Why did 14K people die with ties to hospital restraints amid pandemic?" USA Today, 17 July 2024, www.lohud.com/story/news/2024/07/17/why-did-14k-people-die-with-ties-to-hospital-restraints-amid-pandemic/73602950007/; "U.S. Hospital Deaths Associated with Restraint or Seclusion," USA Today, data.usatoday.com/hospital-death-associated-with-restraint-seclusion/
[7] "D.C. psychiatric hospital accused of compromising safety, security," The Washington Post, 24 Jan. 2026, www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2026/01/24/st-elizabeths-psych-hospital-southeast/
[8] Natalia Emanuel, et al., Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Reports, July 2025
[9] Lori Ashcraft, Ph.D., et al., Best Practices: The Development and Implementation of "No Force First" as a Best Practice, Psychiatry Online, 1 May 2012, psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.ps.20120p415
[10] "Compendium Report: Good Practices to Promote Voluntary Measures in Mental Health," Council of Europe, 2021, p. 82
[11] "No Force First – United Kingdom," Human Rights and Biomedicine, www.coe.int/en/web/human-rights-and-biomedicine/hospital-based-initiatives/-/highest_rated_assets/2fqlxqVUZDqT/content/no-force-first-united-kingdom
[12] www.cchrint.org/about-us/co-founder-dr-thomas-szasz/quotes-on-involuntary-commitment/
As U.S. policies increasingly promote involuntary psychiatric commitment for homeless populations following a July 2025 executive order, the Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR) warns that expanding coercive psychiatry violates human rights and lacks proven benefits.[1] CCHR calls for ending involuntary commitment and forced treatment, urging adoption of rights-respecting alternatives already succeeding internationally.
Coercive psychiatry overrides autonomy without evidence of benefit, the group says. The U.S. Supreme Court affirms that "involuntary commitment to a mental hospital, like involuntary confinement of an individual for any reason, is a deprivation of liberty…."[2]
Unlike limited-consent court-mandated options, involuntary treatment is administered against a person's will, with duration set by court order and state law.[3]
Studies show no clear therapeutic or protective value from coercion, and mounting evidence reveals harm:
- A January 2026 Swedish nationwide study found excess suicide risk among those subjected to involuntary psychiatric treatment compared to other psychiatric populations, with highest risk immediately post-discharge.[4]
- A July 2025 U.S. study reported individuals released from involuntary psychiatric detention were nearly twice as likely to die by suicide or overdose within three months.[5]
- A USA Today investigation documented over 14,000 patient deaths in U.S. medical facilities tied to restraint or seclusion (2019–2024), with nearly 1,000 involving drugs such as opioids, antipsychotics, and sedatives as chemical restraints; over 10,000 deaths occurred within 24 hours of removal.[6]
High restraint use persists in the U.S.; for example, at Washington, D.C.'s St. Elizabeth's Hospital (averaging 72 restraints per month in 2025). In June 2025 alone, staff used restraints 118 times, nearly four times per day, according to city data.[7]
An estimated 1.2 million Americans face involuntary psychiatric hospitalization yearly, exposing them to these risks.[8]
More on TelAve News
- HRC Fertility's Dr. Christo G. Zouves Appointed to San Mateo County Medical Association Board of Directors
- HealthBook+ and Stonebrook Risk Solutions Partner to Bring Predictive Intelligence to Healthcare Risk
- Umbrella Becomes First FinOps Platform to Support AWS Billing Transfer Onboarding
- RECYCLEXPERT FZE Strengthens Leadership in Data Destruction UAE and GCC with Certified Secure ITAD Services
- Assymetrix Launches the Deepest Independent Prediction Market Data API
CCHR points to non-coercive models that exist. Recovery Innovations (RI), Inc.'s "No Force First" policy (2006) recognizes that traditional mental health service models produced poor outcomes. The program limits force to true last-resort emergencies after exhaustive review. In a two-year study of 12,346 cases (32% involuntary arrivals, 44% substance abuse), chemical restraint occurred in only 0.45%—far below state averages—with no seclusion or mechanical restraints during the study period. RI notes that "the highest price of all is the price paid by the people who are restrained: their recovery is stalled by a practice that can disempower them, break their spirit, and reignite a sense of helplessness and hopelessness."[9]
The Council of Europe's 2021 Compendium of Good Practices to Promote Voluntary Measures in Mental Health highlights reductions in coercion:
- Norway: 85% drop in mechanical restraints (2012–2017) at one hospital, with no rise in staff injuries, and was cost-neutral, requiring no additional staffing or financial resources.
- Another Oslo facility: 49% reduction in compulsory admissions compared with voluntary admissions (2000–2008).[10]
In another example:
- The UK's Mersey Care National Health Service (NHS) Foundation Trust recorded 60% reduction in restraints within two years of adopting "No Force First." When expanded across all wards (April 2016 - August 2017), there was a 37% reduction in restraints and financial savings.[11]
Jan Eastgate, CCHR International president, stated, "These show there can be sustained investment in approaches that can eliminate coercion without compromising safety. Alternatively, expanding involuntary commitment expands dangerous state-psychiatric power over vulnerable people, diverting billions to ineffective institutional hospitalization and forced treatment, increasing long-term costs."
CCHR urges repealing involuntary commitment laws, ending coercive practices, and embracing global trends toward eliminating forced psychiatry in favor of voluntary, humane mental health care.
CCHR was established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and renowned professor of psychiatry, Dr. Thomas Szasz, who explained: "It is dishonest to pretend that caring coercively for the mentally ill invariably helps him, and that abstaining from such coercion is tantamount to 'withholding treatment' from him. Every social policy entails benefits as well as harms. Although our ideas about benefits and harms vary from time to time, all history teaches us to beware of benefactors who deprive their beneficiaries of liberty…. There is neither justification nor need for involuntary psychiatric interventions…."[12]
More on TelAve News
- CCHR: 'Plant-Based' Psychedelics Push Masks Synthetic Drugs and Billion-Dollar Profits
- BTR: i2 Group Launches i2 Amplify, a Community Platform for Intelligence Professionals Worldwide
- L.A. Watts Summer Games Announces Free Pelé Tribute Event at Magic Johnson Park
- SUMOFIBER Fuels Explosive Growth With netElastic vBNG
- NRx Pharmaceuticals (N A S D A Q: NRXP) Accelerates Into National Spotlight as Manufacturing Launch, Federal Policy & AI-Driven Breakthroughs Converge
Sources:
[1] Susan E. Collins, "What decades of research reveal about involuntary substance use treatment – and why evidence points elsewhere," The Conversation, 2 Mar. 2026, theconversation.com/what-decades-of-research-reveal-about-involuntary-substance-use-treatment-and-why-evidence-points-elsewhere-268841
[2] O'Connor v. Donaldson, 422 U.S. 563 (1975), www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/422/563
[3] Susan E. Collins, The Conversation, 2 Mar. 2026
[4] Leoni Grossmann et al., "Suicide after Involuntary Psychiatric Care: A Nationwide Cohort Study in Sweden," The Lancet Regional Health – Europe 60 (2026): 101504, www.thelancet.com/journals/lanepe/article/PIIS2666-7762(25)00296-0/fulltext
[5] Natalia Emanuel, et al., "A Danger to Self and Others: Health and Criminal Consequences of Involuntary Hospitalization," Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Reports, no. 1158, July 2025, www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/media/research/staff_reports/sr1158.pdf?sc_lang=en
[6] "Explore our database of 14K hospital restraint deaths in U.S. Where did they happen?" Yahoo! News, 18 July 2024, www.yahoo.com/news/explore-database-14k-hospital-restraint-070117869.html, citing: David Robinson, "Why did 14K people die with ties to hospital restraints amid pandemic?" USA Today, 17 July 2024, www.lohud.com/story/news/2024/07/17/why-did-14k-people-die-with-ties-to-hospital-restraints-amid-pandemic/73602950007/; "U.S. Hospital Deaths Associated with Restraint or Seclusion," USA Today, data.usatoday.com/hospital-death-associated-with-restraint-seclusion/
[7] "D.C. psychiatric hospital accused of compromising safety, security," The Washington Post, 24 Jan. 2026, www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2026/01/24/st-elizabeths-psych-hospital-southeast/
[8] Natalia Emanuel, et al., Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Reports, July 2025
[9] Lori Ashcraft, Ph.D., et al., Best Practices: The Development and Implementation of "No Force First" as a Best Practice, Psychiatry Online, 1 May 2012, psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.ps.20120p415
[10] "Compendium Report: Good Practices to Promote Voluntary Measures in Mental Health," Council of Europe, 2021, p. 82
[11] "No Force First – United Kingdom," Human Rights and Biomedicine, www.coe.int/en/web/human-rights-and-biomedicine/hospital-based-initiatives/-/highest_rated_assets/2fqlxqVUZDqT/content/no-force-first-united-kingdom
[12] www.cchrint.org/about-us/co-founder-dr-thomas-szasz/quotes-on-involuntary-commitment/
Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights International
0 Comments
Latest on TelAve News
- Why Athletic Recovery Begins in the Nervous System
- A Hidden Magical World Awaits in Ashley Gayheart's Upcoming Young Adult Fantasy, Rosewood Academy: The Awakening
- Scott Ritsema of Bisnar Chase Selected for 2026 National Traumatic Brain Injury Association
- Flint Youth Film Festival Shifts Gears, Becomes Vehicle City Film Festival
- 62% of Gen X have no estate planning documents — Trust & Will research identifies "the Sandwich Gap"
- Nayarit's Jungle Coast Redefines Luxury Travel on Mexico's Pacific Now More Accessible Than Ever
- $10 Million Annual Revenue Merger, Profitable Partner in AI Powered Specialty Automotive Sales Projected to Scale Above $200M: Stock Symbol: NWPG
- Virginia Moving Company Nearly Doubles Customer Calls in Two Weeks After Switching to CARL — the Bold New Alternative to WordPress
- RAS AP Consulting Launches Vendor Master File & Payment Controls Assessment for NACHA Phase 2 Compliance
- New Homesites Released at Heritage at Manalapan Featuring Scenic Golf Course Views
- The Ultimate Solution to Halt Thermal Runaway
- Strategic Talent Associates Launches THE ALIGNED RESET™
- Calvetta Phair Founder & CEO Earns AOPA Foundation Flight Training Scholarship, Inspiring a New Generation of STEM Dreamers in Underserved Communities
- MTV EMA Nominee and WOA Founder Oliver Sean Conferred Doctor of Musical Arts (DMA) Degree
- Karen D. Gentry Announces New Book Focused on Relationships and Personal Growth
- New plusOne Research Finds the Orgasm Gap Is a 30-Point Chasm — and Confirms It Isn't Biology
- CCHR Report Links 145 Violent Incidents to Psychiatric Drug Exposure, Urges National Oversight and Action
- Food Journal Magazine Unveils Its Latest 'Best of Los Angeles' Culinary Discoveries
- Boston Industrial Solutions Launches Natron® 717S Series: A New Flexible UV LED Ink for Ricoh GH2220 Printheads
- 5 Things NYC Courier Services Won't Tell You About How Same-Day Delivery Actually Works
