About Cabling Installation & Maintenance

Our mission: Bringing practical business and technical intelligence to today's structured cabling professionals

For more than 30 years, Cabling Installation & Maintenance has provided useful, practical information to professionals responsible for the specification, design, installation and management of structured cabling systems serving enterprise, data center and other environments. These professionals are challenged to stay informed of constantly evolving standards, system-design and installation approaches, product and system capabilities, technologies, as well as applications that rely on high-performance structured cabling systems. Our editors synthesize these complex issues into multiple information products. This portfolio of information products provides concrete detail that improves the efficiency of day-to-day operations, and equips cabling professionals with the perspective that enables strategic planning for networks’ optimum long-term performance.

Throughout our annual magazine, weekly email newsletters and 24/7/365 website, Cabling Installation & Maintenance digs into the essential topics our audience focuses on.

  • Design, Installation and Testing: We explain the bottom-up design of cabling systems, from case histories of actual projects to solutions for specific problems or aspects of the design process. We also look at specific installations using a case-history approach to highlight challenging problems, solutions and unique features. Additionally, we examine evolving test-and-measurement technologies and techniques designed to address the standards-governed and practical-use performance requirements of cabling systems.
  • Technology: We evaluate product innovations and technology trends as they impact a particular product class through interviews with manufacturers, installers and users, as well as contributed articles from subject-matter experts.
  • Data Center: Cabling Installation & Maintenance takes an in-depth look at design and installation workmanship issues as well as the unique technology being deployed specifically for data centers.
  • Physical Security: Focusing on the areas in which security and IT—and the infrastructure for both—interlock and overlap, we pay specific attention to Internet Protocol’s influence over the development of security applications.
  • Standards: Tracking the activities of North American and international standards-making organizations, we provide updates on specifications that are in-progress, looking forward to how they will affect cabling-system design and installation. We also produce articles explaining the practical aspects of designing and installing cabling systems in accordance with the specifications of established standards.

Cabling Installation & Maintenance is published by Endeavor Business Media, a division of EndeavorB2B.

Contact Cabling Installation & Maintenance

Editorial

Patrick McLaughlin

Serena Aburahma

Advertising and Sponsorship Sales

Peter Fretty - Vice President, Market Leader

Tim Carli - Business Development Manager

Brayden Hudspeth - Sales Development Representative

Subscriptions and Memberships

Subscribe to our newsletters and manage your subscriptions

Feedback/Problems

Send a message to our general in-box

 

New WHO Mental Health Guidelines Condemn Coercive Psychiatry

By: PRLog

CCHR Demands U.S. and Global Psychiatry End Forced Detainment, Drugging, and Institutional Abuse

LOS ANGELES - April 28, 2025 - PRLog -- The World Health Organization (WHO) has issued a powerful new directive urging nations to eliminate coercive psychiatric practices, including forced hospitalization, drugging, and seclusion. The Guidance on Mental Health Policy and Strategic Action Plans outlines a rights-based approach that marks a sharp departure from institutionalization and involuntary treatment. The Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR), a global mental health watchdog, has welcomed the guidance while warning that U.S. psychiatry remains dangerously out of step.

The new WHO framework expands upon existing United Nations human rights resolutions that have consistently declared coercive psychiatric practices torture and an abuse of patient autonomy and human rights. According to the Guidance, mental health care must be voluntary, informed, and person-centered.

WHO Principles: Ending Abuse, Enforcing Accountability

The WHO recommends:

  • Prohibiting involuntary psychiatric treatment
  • Abolishing forced hospitalization and medication
  • Upholding the right to refuse treatment
  • Respecting advance directives that allow patients to refuse care in crisis situations
  • Preserving individuals' legal capacity to make their own decision

The WHO further demands robust accountability measures, including public tracking of:
  • Voluntary and involuntary psychiatric admissions
  • Use of physical, mechanical, and chemical restraints
  • Patient deaths in psychiatric institutions
  • Use of psychotropic drugs
  • Violations of advance directives

Despite these mandates, CCHR points out that the U.S. lacks a national, publicly accountable system to collect or publish such data. Transparency is scarce, and institutions are rarely held accountable for harmful or fatal outcomes.

A rare investigation by a national news outlet revealed that, between 2020 and 2023, exposed a deadly national pattern—a lack of transparency and accountability involved in patient restraint and seclusion in hospitals generally, including behavioral and psychiatric. From 2020 to 2023, it found more than 14,300 patient deaths linked to restraint or seclusion. Nearly 1,000 involved drugs used as chemical restraints, including opioids, sedatives, and antipsychotics. Nearly 2,700 patients died while in seclusion or restraints, and almost 11,700 deaths occurred within 24 hours of removal from restraint or seclusion.[1]

These deaths, however, reflect only one aspect of systemic coercion. Research shows that more than half of psychiatric admissions in the U.S. are involuntary.[2] On a single day in 2018, 57% of psychiatric hospital patients were admitted against their will, rising to 89% in public psychiatric facilities.[3]

Patients in these environments report widespread abuse:
  • 31% report physical assault
  • 8% report sexual assault
  • Most witness traumatic incidents during their stay

"The data is clear—coercion is not a rare exception under U.S. psychiatric treatment. It is a defining feature of the system," said Jan Eastgate, President of CCHR. "And the longer this is ignored, the more lives will be lost to silence, trauma, and preventable harm and deaths."

The WHO Calls for Systemic Change

The WHO's solution is bold: close institutions and eliminate financial incentives that perpetuate institutionalization. CCHR strongly supports this recommendation, having documented ongoing abuse in high-volume psychiatric facilities, especially those operating under profit-driven models.

Numerous reports have exposed neglect, physical assaults, and preventable patient deaths in such environments, including in 21 for-profit psychiatric hospitals in California.
"These facilities often operate without effective independent oversight or transparency," said Eastgate. "It is unacceptable that vulnerable individuals are placed in high-risk environments with little to no accountability for the patient sexual abuse, forced treatment and deadly restraints that occur behind closed doors."

Rejecting the "Brain Disease" Model

The WHO Guidance also challenges the prevailing psychiatric model that treats mental distress as a brain-based disease requiring lifelong drug treatment. Instead, it promotes non-coercive, person-led recovery and psychosocial supports.

It calls on governments and providers to:
  • End forced drugging and community treatment orders
  • Ensure patients can legally refuse psychiatric drugs and other treatment
  • Support individuals in safely withdrawing from psychiatric drugs, with full disclosure of risks
  • Make non-drug interventions the first-line approach
  • Redirect research funding toward rights-based, service-user-led models of care

CCHR emphasizes that these principles are not radical—they are now the official global standard. Yet U.S. psychiatry continues to advocate for involuntary commitment, forced drugging, and electroshock, including on minors.

"This biomedical model has failed not only patients but public trust," said Eastgate. "It has resulted in a mental health system plagued by poor and lethal outcomes and human rights violations."

CCHR, which was established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and world-renowned psychiatrist and author, Prof. Thomas Szasz, is now calling on:
  • Federal and state lawmakers to adopt the WHO standards and enact legal protections against coercive practices
  • Oversight bodies to mandate full transparency from all psychiatric facilities
  • Licensing boards to enforce patient rights and prosecute rights violations

"This is a moment of reckoning for psychiatry," Eastgate concluded. "The evidence of harm is overwhelming. The guidance for reform is clear. Now, it is up to the U.S. to either embrace change—or be held responsible for the continued suffering of those entrusted to its care."

Sources:

[1] David Robinson, "Why did 14K people die with ties to hospital restraints amid pandemic?," Democrat & Chronicle, New York State team, 17 July 2024, www.democratandchronicle.com/story/news/2024/07/17/why-did-14k-people-die-with-ties-to-hospital-restraints-amid-pandemic/73602950007/

[2] Morris, N, "Involuntary Commitments: Billing Patients for Forced Psychiatric Care," Am J Psychiatry, 1 Dec 2020, psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.ajp.2020.20030319

[3] www.samhsa.gov/data/report/national-mental-health-services-survey-n-mhss-2018-data-mental-health-treatment-facilities

Contact
CCHR International
***@cchr.org

Photos: (Click photo to enlarge)

New Mental Health Guideline on Coercive Psychiatry


Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights International

Read Full Story - New WHO Mental Health Guidelines Condemn Coercive Psychiatry | More news from this source

Press release distribution by PRLog
Stock Quote API & Stock News API supplied by www.cloudquote.io
Quotes delayed at least 20 minutes.
By accessing this page, you agree to the following
Privacy Policy and Terms Of Service.