Still Crying for Help
The Failure of Our Mental Healthcare Services
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BySadia Messaili (Author)
Ebook
A 32-year-old man with mental illness ends his life. Could he have been saved? What care did he receive? Did antipsychotics help or are they a modern-day straitjacket?
Ferid Ferkovic, the author’s son, committed suicide after being refused admission to a Montreal hospital. Throughout treatment, he and his family dealt with changing diagnoses, drugs with devastating side effects, and insensitive health care professionals.
The suicide of Sadia Messaili’s son Ferid Ferkovic, who immigrated to Canada with his family at the age of 12, is the starting point in a challenging quest for truth. First about our failing mental health care system. Then about justice. And finally about better ways to rekindle hope among people who are “still crying for help.”
Sadia Messaili, born in Morocco, is a primary school teacher and special needs educator. She describes her personal journey as that of “a good immigrant wherever she has lived: Algeria, Croatia, Austria and Montreal, Québec.” Her first book about forced migratory wandering is titled La route de la dignité.
Aleshia Jensen is Montreal translator. Her translations include Explosions by Mathieu Poulin and Prague by Maude Veilleux, co-translated with Aimee Wall, both published by QC Fiction.
Reviews
“[Messaili] describes an environment that is coercive, punitive, and shaped to cater to doctors’ egos rather than patients’ needs. Instead of being listened to, Ferid [Messaili’s son] is drugged into submission… those who have tried to navigate the labyrinthine and under-resourced mental health system will find validation in [her] words.” Anne Thériault, Quill & Quire
“This is an important book for those that are on both sides of the mental health equation. It shows what a grieving parent goes through (“We grieve twice” she tells us) as they come up against a system that just does not work.” James Fisher, The Miramichi Reader
Praise
“Full of agony, disbelief, and blind determination, this achingly told story is a love letter from mother to son. Sadia retraces the journey of Ferid’s life mired by multifarious treatment options, none of which rescue him from an assortment of imprecise and ever-changing psychiatric diagnoses. “Painfully underlined is the expectation we all have that our medical system will intervene with therapeutic solutions, not just for physical illness, but for mental illness. The redemption of that failure can be found with alternative therapies beyond what pharmaceutical companies could ever hope to deliver. The stark truth is that reductionist biological theories have led to hopelessness and even suicide. “A powerful book that is required reading to further the conversation about mental illness. It is a vital addition to a long list that raises public consciousness surrounding mental illness.” Susan Doherty, author of Ghost Garden, Inside the Lives of Schizophrenias Feared and Forgotten (PenguinRandomHouse 2019)
Table of contents
| Still Crying for Help, The Failure of Our Mental Healthcare Services | 1 |
|---|---|
| Foreword. A Story of Therapeutic Failure | 9 |
| 1. Deux-Montagnes, April 21, 2013 | 21 |
| 2. April 22, 2013: The First Day Without Ferid | 29 |
| 3. April 24, 2013: The Day of Departure | 32 |
| 4. Ferid: Before | 34 |
| 5. Ignorance | 43 |
| 6. Starting Over | 56 |
| 7. First Signs | 58 |
| 8. First Hospitalization | 61 |
| Twist of fate | 72 |
| 9. Electroshock Treatment | 75 |
| Going off medication | 79 |
| 10. Reality on the Ground | 82 |
| Health service blind spots | 84 |
| 11. Home from the Hospital | 86 |
| Big pharma’s questionable practices | 87 |
| 12. Road to Recovery or Dead-End? | 90 |
| 13. Drug-Free Treatment | 96 |
| The Scandinavian and Finnish examples | 100 |
| 14. Three Years of Remission | 103 |
| 15. Zyprexa | 107 |
| The Zyprexa trial | 108 |
| Long-term use of antipsychotics | 112 |
| The responsibility of prescribing physicians | 114 |
| 16. Schizophrenia | 117 |
| The toll on family | 122 |
| Difficult times | 125 |
| 17. A Rich or an Impoverished Life? | 131 |
| 18. Relapse | 134 |
| Isolated, lonely and exhausted | 136 |
| An exceptional degree of autonomy | 139 |
| The trip to Algeria | 140 |
| 19. Ferid, aka Jesus Christ: A Second Psychotic Episode | 142 |
| Building on the person’s healthy side | 146 |
| 20. Court Authorization for Treatment | 150 |
| “Free and enlightened” consent | 152 |
| A disregard for protocol | 154 |
| 21. Meeting the Social Worker, or Autoposy of an Act of Sabotage | 156 |
| Hope: cornerstone to recovery | 162 |
| 22. Other Options | 166 |
| Alternative treatment | 168 |
| 23. Hope Fraught with Hazard | 172 |
| 24. April 14, 2013: The Emergency Room | 174 |
| 25. April 15, 2013 | 178 |
| The link between suicide and schizophrenia | 179 |
| 26. Life After Ferid | 184 |
| The link between prescription drugs and suicide | 187 |
| 27. Fighting Fatalism | 191 |
| Abilify: a long list of side effects | 192 |
| 28. Filing a Complaint: The Long Wait | 195 |
| Hope and happiness | 197 |
| 29. Duty to Rescue | 200 |
| Meeting with the review committee | 204 |
| 30. Ferid Ferkovic’s Story | 207 |
| 31. Support Through Dignity | 209 |
| Acknowledgements | 213 |
| Notes | 215 |
| Foreword | 215 |
| 4. Ferid: Before | 216 |
| 5. Ignorance | 216 |
| 8. First Hospitalization | 216 |
| 9. Electroshock Treatment | 217 |
| 10. Reality on the Ground | 217 |
| 11. Home from the Hospital | 217 |
| 12. Road to Recovery or Dead-End? | 217 |
| 13. Drug-Free Treatment | 218 |
| 14. Three Years of Remission | 218 |
| 15. Zyprexa | 218 |
| 16. Schizophrenia | 220 |
| 18. Relapse | 220 |
| 19. Ferid, aka Jesus Christ: A Second Psychotic Episode | 221 |
| 20. Court Authorization for Treatment | 221 |
| 21. Meeting the Social Worker, or Autoposy of an Act of Sabotage | 221 |
| 22. Other Options | 222 |
| 25. April 15, 2013 | 222 |
| 26. Life After Ferid | 222 |
| 27. Fighting Fatalism | 223 |
| 28. Filing a Complaint: The Long Wait | 223 |
| 29. Duty to Rescue | 223 |
| ALSO FROM BARAKA BOOKS | 225 |
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Author biographies
About Sadia Messaili
Sadia Messaili, born in Morocco, is a primary school teacher and special needs educator. She describes her personal journey as that of “a good immigrant wherever she has lived: Algeria, Croatia, Austriaand Montreal, Québec.” Her first book about forced migratory wandering is titled, La route de la dignité.
By the same author
View allBook details
- Publisher
- Baraka Books
- Categories
- Psychiatry, Psychopharmacology, Psychology
- Publication date
- August 2020
- Pages
- 226
- Chapters
- 81
- Language
- English
- ISBN EPUB
- 9781771862318
- ISBN Paper
- 9781771862271
