Skip to content
General News, Mental Health

Psychiatry: An Industry Under Scrutiny – Mental Health Exhibit Expose Opens in Sydney

Citizens Commission on Human Rights 3 mins read

As Mental Health Month draws to a close, a chilling exhibition on violations of human rights in the psychiatric system, Psychiatry: An Industry of Death, opens today in Sydney. It aims to raise awareness of the potentially harmful practices within the psychiatric industry to provide essential information to help individuals and families safeguard their mental health.

 

Hosted by the Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR), the exhibition will run for two days and shine a spotlight on the often hidden risks associated with psychiatric treatments.

 

The exhibition presents an unvarnished history of psychiatry, from its origins to modern day practices, including the alarming rise in the use of psychiatric drugs to children.

 

Psychiatric abuse remains a pressing issue, with concerns over forced electroshock therapy, involuntary treatment, and the lack of transparency regarding the potential dangers of psychiatric drugs which are also forced on children and adults without their consent. The exhibition exposes these practices, offering visitors insight into the side effects and risks that patients and their families may not be fully informed about.

 

In Australia, over 80 psychiatric drug warnings have been issued by the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA), highlighting risks such as aggression, involuntary movements, heart and liver complications, suicidal behaviour, and even death.

 

Despite these warnings, many parents report not being fully informed of the potential risks when psychiatric drugs are prescribed for their children.

 

For instance, side effects reported to the TGA include a 9-year-old boy on an antidepressant and an antipsychotic who exhibited self-harm and suicidal ideation. Another case detailed a 14-year-old who experienced a severe increase in suicidal thoughts just two days after starting fluoxetine, previously there was no suicidal ideation.

 

These concerning accounts underscore the importance of transparent communication for parents and patients at the time psychiatric drugs are prescribed.

 

CCHR is calling for the immediate implementation of a key recommendation from the Productivity Commission's 2020 Mental Health Inquiry. The inquiry advised that all psychiatric drug prescriptions include a prominent statement indicating that clinicians should have discussed possible side effects and provide evidence-based alternatives to psychiatric drugs. Despite the urgency of this recommendation and the Productivity Commission stating it should, “start now”, it has yet to be enforced.

 

Adding to the concern, the use of electroshock (also called electroconvulsive therapy- ECT), which involves administering hundreds of volts of electricity to the brain to induce a seizure, remains legal in New South Wales, including for children, pregnant women, and the elderly. ECT has been linked to serious complications such as heart attack, stroke, memory loss, and, in some cases, death.

 

The United Nations and the World Health Organisation (WHO), have called for a ban on forced ECT.  In a recent UN and WHO report, they described electroshock as an "irreversible" treatment that can cause “memory loss and brain damage,” urging governments to prohibit the use of forced ECT. They also said “ECT is not recommended for children and should be prohibited through legislation.”  

 

Despite these expert warnings, applications for involuntary electroshock to the NSW Mental Health Tribunal continue, with 765 requests made in 2023 alone, three of which involved girls under the age of 16.

 

Visitors to the exhibition will have the opportunity to sign a petition calling for a ban on the use of electroshock in NSW.

 

The exhibition features informational panels and audiovisual presentations, including interviews with psychiatrists, psychologists, doctors, lawyers, and survivors of psychiatric mistreatment.

 

This exhibit is a must-see for anyone concerned about the direction of mental health practices in Australia. It provides valuable information for individuals seeking to make informed decisions about psychiatric treatments and protect the mental health of themselves and their families.

 

Exhibition Details:

 

  • Dates: Friday, 18th October (10am to 9pm) and Saturday, 19th October (10am to 7pm)
  • Venue: Embassy Conference Centre, 826 George Street, Sydney (corner of George and Regent Streets, near Central Station)
  • Footage Rating: MA15+ (Strong Themes, Surgical Procedures)

 

For more information, contact Shelley Wilkins at (02) 9964 9844 or via email at [email protected].

 

CCHR was co-founded in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and Professor of Psychiatry, the late Dr. Thomas Szasz, to investigate and expose psychiatric violations of human rights.

 

 


Key Facts:

 

765 applications made to forcibly electroshock NSW patients in 2023.

Call for immmediate implimentation of the Productivity Commisison's recommendation that all prescriptions for psychiatric drugs have a prominent statement that their doctor should have advised them of potential side effects and alternatives. 

More from this category

  • Environment, General News
  • 08/12/2025
  • 12:38
Australian Conservation Foundation

ACF spokespeople available for interview on bushfires and climate/nature risk

As another dangerous summer begins – with bushfires having already destroyed dozens of houses and one firefighter having been killed – Australian Conservation Foundation spokespeople are available for media analysis on extreme weather. ACF spokespeople can: Discuss the impact of bushfires on nature, threatened species and communities Join the dots between extreme weather, the unstable climate and the expansion of the gas industry ACF’s campaigns director Dr Paul Sinclair said: “Australians are at the forefront of the climate crisis and experts warn the unstable climate is making extreme weather events harder to predict. “The direct costs of climate change are…

  • General News, Travel Tourism
  • 08/12/2025
  • 11:07
Australian National Maritime Museum

Take a summer vacation at the Australian National Maritime Museum

19 December – 1 February More Play. More Fun. One Big Summer Festival. With summer upon us, there’s a familiar, seasonal pull towards the water. The air is warmer, the days stretch longer, and the city starts to shimmer with the promise of holidays. This year, the museum captures that feeling, bringing the beach to the heart of the harbour with a program that celebrates sunshine, culture, and the simple pleasure of being in, on or by the water. Inside the Lighthouse Gallery, The Beach beckons - an intergenerational, immersive playground that captures the spirit of the season. It’s bright,…

  • Contains:
  • General News
  • 08/12/2025
  • 09:14
UNSW Sydney

Social Media Ban, UNSW Experts Available for Comment

The Australian Government’s new restrictions preventing people under 16 from accessing social media platforms will come into effect on 10 December 2025. The changes require platforms to implement age-verification measures and enforce minimum age requirements. UNSW experts are available to comment and provide context and analysis on the technical, social, economic and policy considerations of the new rules. UNSW Business School Professor Barney Tan, Head of School, School of Information Systems and Technology Management, UNSW Business School, is available for comment. Prof. Tan can comment on the governance and societal impacts of digital technologies, including how policy and regulatory interventions…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.