Popular on TelAve
- $73.6 Million Multi-Year Backlog and Florida State Term Contract Drive Momentum for AI-Cybersecurity Pioneer: Cycurion, Inc. (N A S D A Q: CYCU) $CYCU
- The AI CEO Partners with D3 Hockey News to Elevate the Voice of Division III Hockey Nationwide
- Assent Recognizes Manufacturers for Leading Supply Chain Sustainability Programs
- National Compliance Firm issues Artificial Intelligence Policy Program for Mortgage Banking
- Cerberus ODC in Collaboration with NVIDIA Launches All-American AI-RAN Stack, Enabling AI-Native 5G Today and Accelerating the Path to 6G
- 5,000 Australians Call for Clarity: NaturismRE's Petition Reaches Major Milestone
- Qvarz LLC Expands Global Reach with High-Precision Quartz Cuvettes and Optical Components
- Year-Round Deals for Customers With Square Signs
- Statement from the Campaign of Theodis Daniel, Republican for U.S. Congress (TX-18)
- $300 Million Web3 Initiative and ZIGChain Partnership Power $20 Target in Noble Capital Markets Report for SEGG Media (N A S D A Q: SEGG)
Similar on TelAve
- Safe Health Zones: A Global Breakthrough to Protect Night-Shift Workers from Preventable Harm
- NATCO Awarded U.S. Patent for Persimonal® – Breakthrough Innovation in Preparing Persimmon Leaf Extract
- Dr. Alexander Eastman Returns to Suburban Hospital to Deliver Keynote on Crisis Leadership
- Scoop Social Co.'s Mobile Dessert Truck Business Offer A Lifestyle Of Flavor, Fun, and Freedom
- Own 327 Acres of American Prime Real Estate with 2 Miles Waterfront Worth In Millions for Just $7 — Worldwide Raffle Launched
- Monika Balayan Elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts (FRSA)
- We're Winning: Historic Plunge in Overdose Deaths Marks Stunning Reversal in America's Drug Crisis
- Lineus Medical Receives Patent for SafeBreak® Vascular Generation 2
- CCHR's New Documentary Prescription for Violence Highlights Overlooked Safety Warnings
- Men's Health Network Announces a New Feature to Support the Well-Being of Men When and Where They Are through Text Alerts
Time to Investigate Mental Health Research Waste on Bizarre Animal Studies
TelAve News/10847893
An in-depth investigation is needed into taxpayer dollars spent on bizarre research of animals, fish and insects, in a failed attempt to understand human behavior and improve mental health, watchdog reports
LOS ANGELES - TelAve -- With government waste raising economic concerns for the country, the mental health industry watchdog, Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR) says it is time to demand accountability for the $40 billion of taxpayer dollars allocated to federal agencies, such as the National Institute for Mental Health (NIMH) to study fruit flies, mouse brains, zebrafish, Siberian hamsters, Russian cats, and other animal groups, purportedly to address mental health issues. Recent research reveals over $2.14 million was spent to study fruit fly brains.[1] A further $457,500 was allocated to study how early-life trauma affects brain development in zebrafish which may increase the risk of psychiatric disorders.[2] A $1,334,079 study is investigating the anatomical and structural organization of a healthy mouse brain and how it might regulate computation.[3]
Dr. Roger McFillin, Ph.D., who recently wrote "The Billion Dollar Brain Myth," says, "Since 2000, American taxpayers have bankrolled over $40 billion in NIMH's futile quest to reduce human suffering to faulty genes and brain circuits, yet suicide rates have soared" and "youth mental health collapsed." With research prioritizing the "biomedical model," he says, "the biological paradigm hasn't just failed—it has actively harmed by teaching people their suffering is a brain defect rather than a meaningful response to life experiences."[4]
For years, Senator Rand Paul has exposed research waste, including a study of Russian cats walking on treadmills.[5] In a 2021 Congressional speech, he condemned such "ridiculous" taxpayer-funded research, citing $1.6 million spent studying "Lizards on a Treadmill."[6] He also criticized $356,000 spent studying whether or not "Japanese quail are more sexually promiscuous on cocaine," commenting, "Common sense would have told us one that cocaine is probably not good for you and that cocaine might make you do things that you wouldn't have done otherwise had you not been on cocaine."[7]
More on TelAve News
The failure of such research was highlighted in a 2017 interview with Thomas Insel, a psychiatrist and former NIMH director, 2002-2015, who said: "I spent 13 years at NIMH really pushing on the neuroscience and genetics of mental disorders, and when I look back on that I realize that while I think I succeeded at getting lots of really cool papers published by cool scientists at fairly large costs—I think $20 billion—I don't think we moved the needle in reducing suicide, reducing hospitalizations, improving recovery for the tens of millions of people who have mental illness."[8]
Additionally, he conceded: "The United States, a country that leads the world in spending on medical research, also stands out for its dismal outcomes in people with mental illnesses. Indeed, over the last three decades, even as the government invested billions of dollars in better understanding the brain, by some measures, those outcomes have deteriorated."[9]
As an example, a 2011 government report found that just over one in 10 adults took prescription drugs for "problems with emotions, nerves or mental health," according to a JAMA study. In 2013, one in six (17%) of U.S. adults reported taking a psychiatric drug.[10] By 2021, it had escalated to one in four Americans over the age of 18 taking these drugs.[11] IQVia reported 70,307,316 adults aged 18 and above taking psychotropic drugs, and 6.1 million ages 0-17. Of the latter, there were 418,425 in the 0-5 age group.[12]
Since 1995, CCHR has been exposing bizarre psychiatric research. That year, CCHR's examination revealed that $20.3 million had been spent on 25 studies alone, which included budgerigars, crickets, rat pups, whiptail lizards, swamp fish, Siamese fighting fish, treefrogs, guinea pigs, and Siberian hamsters.
The research included a 31-year, near $11 million study of the effect of drugs on rats when they were "subjected to mild, persistent, inescapable stress," $1.5 million for a 21-year study of rat-pup behavior; a 21-year grant of $1.6 million to study the "electronic chirping" of electric fish; $875,382 on zebrafish and swamp sparrows; $333,000 for an 8 study of the sexual behavior of castrated quail and $200,000 on a 4-year study of sexual behavior of horses.
More on TelAve News
At that time Tom Schatz, president of Citizens Against Government Waste, and a former legislative director for Congressman Hamilton Fish Jr. stated: "It's time to part the veil of secrecy and esoteric semantics surrounding some of the…grants and let taxpayers know what kind of wacky, even sinister science-fair experiments they're paying for."
The ongoing waste of taxpayer funds on questionable and ineffective research underscores the urgent need for accountability within the mental health sector. Despite billions of dollars spent, the lack of tangible improvements in public health, particularly in addressing mental health, demands a reevaluation of research priorities. Ensuring accountability is needed now more than ever, and CCHR remains committed to investigating and exposing wasteful mental health research.
CCHR was established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and eminent psychiatrist, Professor Thomas Szasz, and has campaigned for transparency and accountability in the mental health field, and for patients' human rights, obtaining legislative support and laws enacting patient protections.
Sources:
[1] "Accelerating connectomic proofreading for larger brains and multiple individuals," NIH Project Number 1RF1MH129268-01
[2] "Determining the impact of early adversity on the developing vertebrate brain," NIH Project Number 1R15MH132057-01
[3] reporter.nih.gov/search/2rXC5XA9tEmWshK2IpYcWQ/project-details/10505417
[4] drmcfillin.substack.com/p/the-billion-dollar-brain-myth
[5] www.hsgac.senate.gov/media/reps/dr-paul-releases-2023-festivus-report-on-government-waste/
[6] www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/2872317/lizards-on-a-treadmill-rand-paul-calls-out-wasteful-research-spending-with-colorful-props-on-senate-floor/
[7] wjla.com/news/nation-world/spending-money-studying-quails-on-cocaine-is-waste-of-government-spending-says-rand-paul
[8] psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.ps.202000739
[9] lifeprocessprogram.com/american-psychiatry-misled-the-world/
[10] www.scientificamerican.com/article/1-in-6-americans-takes-a-psychiatric-drug/
[11] quotewizard.com/news/mental-health-prescriptions
[12] www.cchrint.org/psychiatric-drugs/people-taking-psychiatric-drugs/
Dr. Roger McFillin, Ph.D., who recently wrote "The Billion Dollar Brain Myth," says, "Since 2000, American taxpayers have bankrolled over $40 billion in NIMH's futile quest to reduce human suffering to faulty genes and brain circuits, yet suicide rates have soared" and "youth mental health collapsed." With research prioritizing the "biomedical model," he says, "the biological paradigm hasn't just failed—it has actively harmed by teaching people their suffering is a brain defect rather than a meaningful response to life experiences."[4]
For years, Senator Rand Paul has exposed research waste, including a study of Russian cats walking on treadmills.[5] In a 2021 Congressional speech, he condemned such "ridiculous" taxpayer-funded research, citing $1.6 million spent studying "Lizards on a Treadmill."[6] He also criticized $356,000 spent studying whether or not "Japanese quail are more sexually promiscuous on cocaine," commenting, "Common sense would have told us one that cocaine is probably not good for you and that cocaine might make you do things that you wouldn't have done otherwise had you not been on cocaine."[7]
More on TelAve News
- Q4 2025 Outlook: JGCMGS Unveils High-Frequency Infrastructure for Italian and Global Markets
- UK Financial Ltd Announces Full Ecosystem To Erc-3643 "SEC-Ready" Tokens For All UK Financial Ltd Tokenized Projects
- Pushing the Wave Series Launches Premium Hardback Editions of 2017–2022 and 2023 Volumes
- 12G-SDI to Fiber Converter for Broadcast fiber systems
- ZEELOOL 2025 Black Friday and Cyber Monday Big Deals
The failure of such research was highlighted in a 2017 interview with Thomas Insel, a psychiatrist and former NIMH director, 2002-2015, who said: "I spent 13 years at NIMH really pushing on the neuroscience and genetics of mental disorders, and when I look back on that I realize that while I think I succeeded at getting lots of really cool papers published by cool scientists at fairly large costs—I think $20 billion—I don't think we moved the needle in reducing suicide, reducing hospitalizations, improving recovery for the tens of millions of people who have mental illness."[8]
Additionally, he conceded: "The United States, a country that leads the world in spending on medical research, also stands out for its dismal outcomes in people with mental illnesses. Indeed, over the last three decades, even as the government invested billions of dollars in better understanding the brain, by some measures, those outcomes have deteriorated."[9]
As an example, a 2011 government report found that just over one in 10 adults took prescription drugs for "problems with emotions, nerves or mental health," according to a JAMA study. In 2013, one in six (17%) of U.S. adults reported taking a psychiatric drug.[10] By 2021, it had escalated to one in four Americans over the age of 18 taking these drugs.[11] IQVia reported 70,307,316 adults aged 18 and above taking psychotropic drugs, and 6.1 million ages 0-17. Of the latter, there were 418,425 in the 0-5 age group.[12]
Since 1995, CCHR has been exposing bizarre psychiatric research. That year, CCHR's examination revealed that $20.3 million had been spent on 25 studies alone, which included budgerigars, crickets, rat pups, whiptail lizards, swamp fish, Siamese fighting fish, treefrogs, guinea pigs, and Siberian hamsters.
The research included a 31-year, near $11 million study of the effect of drugs on rats when they were "subjected to mild, persistent, inescapable stress," $1.5 million for a 21-year study of rat-pup behavior; a 21-year grant of $1.6 million to study the "electronic chirping" of electric fish; $875,382 on zebrafish and swamp sparrows; $333,000 for an 8 study of the sexual behavior of castrated quail and $200,000 on a 4-year study of sexual behavior of horses.
More on TelAve News
- Americans Are Building Family Legacies That Last Generations — Not Just Paychecks That Last a Month
- Bent Danholm Lists Contemporary Lakefront Residence in Winter Garden's Avalon Cove
- Safe Health Zones: A Global Breakthrough to Protect Night-Shift Workers from Preventable Harm
- ProfileSpider Launches Powerful One-Click Profile Scraper for Recruiters and Growth Teams
- NATCO Awarded U.S. Patent for Persimonal® – Breakthrough Innovation in Preparing Persimmon Leaf Extract
At that time Tom Schatz, president of Citizens Against Government Waste, and a former legislative director for Congressman Hamilton Fish Jr. stated: "It's time to part the veil of secrecy and esoteric semantics surrounding some of the…grants and let taxpayers know what kind of wacky, even sinister science-fair experiments they're paying for."
The ongoing waste of taxpayer funds on questionable and ineffective research underscores the urgent need for accountability within the mental health sector. Despite billions of dollars spent, the lack of tangible improvements in public health, particularly in addressing mental health, demands a reevaluation of research priorities. Ensuring accountability is needed now more than ever, and CCHR remains committed to investigating and exposing wasteful mental health research.
CCHR was established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and eminent psychiatrist, Professor Thomas Szasz, and has campaigned for transparency and accountability in the mental health field, and for patients' human rights, obtaining legislative support and laws enacting patient protections.
Sources:
[1] "Accelerating connectomic proofreading for larger brains and multiple individuals," NIH Project Number 1RF1MH129268-01
[2] "Determining the impact of early adversity on the developing vertebrate brain," NIH Project Number 1R15MH132057-01
[3] reporter.nih.gov/search/2rXC5XA9tEmWshK2IpYcWQ/project-details/10505417
[4] drmcfillin.substack.com/p/the-billion-dollar-brain-myth
[5] www.hsgac.senate.gov/media/reps/dr-paul-releases-2023-festivus-report-on-government-waste/
[6] www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/2872317/lizards-on-a-treadmill-rand-paul-calls-out-wasteful-research-spending-with-colorful-props-on-senate-floor/
[7] wjla.com/news/nation-world/spending-money-studying-quails-on-cocaine-is-waste-of-government-spending-says-rand-paul
[8] psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.ps.202000739
[9] lifeprocessprogram.com/american-psychiatry-misled-the-world/
[10] www.scientificamerican.com/article/1-in-6-americans-takes-a-psychiatric-drug/
[11] quotewizard.com/news/mental-health-prescriptions
[12] www.cchrint.org/psychiatric-drugs/people-taking-psychiatric-drugs/
Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights
0 Comments
Latest on TelAve News
- Lakefront Acreage in Longwood's Ravensbrook Community Hits the Market
- Kudosity appoints Jules Holden to drive channel growth and expand offering in ecommerce and retail
- Monika Balayan Elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts (FRSA)
- We're Winning: Historic Plunge in Overdose Deaths Marks Stunning Reversal in America's Drug Crisis
- Lineus Medical Receives Patent for SafeBreak® Vascular Generation 2
- New 2025–2026 Energy Rebates: Squeaks Services Explains How to Qualify
- CCHR's New Documentary Prescription for Violence Highlights Overlooked Safety Warnings
- Men's Health Network Announces a New Feature to Support the Well-Being of Men When and Where They Are through Text Alerts
- Comp-U-Floor Unveils Powerful New Commercial Module
- Revenue Optics Announces the Appointment of Sonal Chowdhury as Senior Manager – Strategic Operations
- How California Convinces Buyers Not to Purchase New Cars — and How This Hurts Dealers
- Tax Fears and Political Volatility Drive Wealthy UK Residents to Consider Leaving, La Vida Survey Shows
- Titan Steel Buildings Expands Nationwide to Deliver Large Steel Warehouses and Industrial Facilities
- Kaltra Removes Size Barriers for Microchannel Coils with Fully Integrated Large-MCHE Production
- Guests Can Save 10 Percent Off New Vacation Rental Homes at KeysCaribbean's Village at Hawks Cay Villas
- Paylode Acquired by Moved to Power the Next Generation of Ancillary Revenue Automation
- Global Preschool Giants Unite to Celebrate the 12th Anniversary of Badanamu's Hit Song "Ponytail"
- America's Leading Annuity Expert Carlton Cap Averil II Joins Tom Hegna on "Financial Freedom with Tom Hegna"
- Cheeron Partners with CRCC to Support Shanghai East Railway Station
- MiBoxer Shines at 2025 Hong Kong International Lighting Fair, Intelligent Lighting Solutions Acclaimed by Global Clients
