Popular on s4story
- USA Best Book Awards Finalist What Love Leaves Behind Releases March 24 - 441
- Oberfeld Press Author Releases Typographic Series Ahead of July Publication - 224
- The World's First Fully Regenerative Economy: Securing Energy, Food, and a Clean Planet - 183
- New Book Synthesizes Six Peer-Reviewed Research Programs Into Unified Framework for Consciousness - 121
- QuickTrack by Datalex Transforms Retail Promoter Management with Claude AI and Real-Time Insights - 107
- High5VR Announces World's First Fully Immersive First-Person VR Movie - 107
- New YA Fantasy "The Whispering Key" by Auren Keyes Launches The Luminara Chronicles
- Conexwest: Shipping Containers Are Powering the Next Generation of Bitcoin Mining Infrastructure
- Homeowner Prep Announces Strategic Language Shift: Replacing "Renters" with "Future Homeowners" to Inspire Wealth-Building Mindsets
- Silence and Resistance: Memoir of a Girlhood in Haiti, is Longlisted for the BOCAS Literary Award in Nonfiction
Similar on s4story
- Pacific Emblem Company Launches "Happy 250th Birthday America" Collection and Proud Supporter of the Gary Sinise Foundation
- YOKE Expands NIL Club Into Athlete-Led Commerce With Athlete Merch Launch
- Permian Museum Adds Photos of Fossils Discovered on a Meteorite
- Radarsign™ Awarded Sourcewell Contract Expanding Access to Traffic Safety Solutions
- Larry R. Wasion's Jump Gate 2: Teleporter Expands the Time Travel Universe with High-Stakes Action and Ethical Dilemmas
- Marcus Boyd Announces Upcoming Children's Book The Royal World of Autism and Expands His Global Advocacy for Autism Awareness
- Igniting High-Growth Transformation With Launch of XMax AI Subsidiary, Leveraging Global Furniture Dominance to Enter Explosive AI Markets: XMax Inc
- Acuvance Earns 2026 Great Place to Work® Certification
- Mac Mountain Selects netElastic vRouter for LightCraft Broadband-as-a-Service Platform
- Congressional Roundtable Exposes Mental Health Crisis: More Spending and Treatment, Worse Results – CCHR Demands Accountability
CCHR: Taxpayer Billions Wasted on Mental Health Research as Outcomes Deteriorate
S For Story/10684347
CCHR calls for a congressional audit of NIMH after decades of costly, brutal animal experiments, unpublished trials, and failed biomedical research, as U.S. suicide rates, disability, and psychiatric drug harm continue to rise.
LOS ANGELES - s4story -- By CCHR International
Research waste at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) is reportedly costing U.S. taxpayers over $100 million annually, according to analyses of completed NIH-funded trials. A review of grants completed between 2017 and 2019 found 137 clinical trials involving 41,501 children that never made their results public, despite being funded with $362 million.[1] With an annual budget of $48 billion, the NIH is the largest public funder of health, including mental health research, in the world. Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) International, a mental health industry watchdog, says transparency failures, poor patient benefits, and mounting evidence of waste are a serious concern.
CCHR says the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) merits close scrutiny. Critics note that NIMH-funded research has repeatedly shocked, brain-damaged, restrained, and dissected animals. Yet new drugs that reportedly tested "safe and effective" in animals fail in human clinical trials about 95% of the time.[2]
Across at least a dozen major U.S. universities and federal laboratories, the NIMH spent tens of millions of taxpayer dollars on invasive and often lethal animal experiments in a speculative attempt to explain human behavior. These studies have involved deliberately inducing severe psychological distress in animals; surgically implanting electrodes into the brains of monkeys, mice, bats, fish, ants, and insects; depriving animals of food or water to force compliance; simulating predator attacks through virtual reality; and ultimately killing and dissecting animals to examine their brains.[3]
Mounting Congressional concern is reflected in Senator Rand Paul's Festivus Report 2025, which exposed millions in federal spending on frivolous and cruel animal studies, including over $1 million spent on teaching teenage ferrets to binge drink alcohol and $14,643,280 to make monkeys play a "Price Is Right"-inspired video game, and more.[4]
With many individual projects costing $1–5 million each, including $25 million spent on studying fruit fly behavior, and despite decades of this funding and allegations of cruelty, there is no evidence these animal experiments have translated into meaningful improvements in mental-health outcomes for Americans. On the contrary, rates of depression, anxiety, suicide, disability, and psychiatric drug use have continued to rise, while serious adverse effects, including violence, self-harm, and chronic disability, are now widely documented. "The result is a research paradigm that inflicts extensive harm on animals, consumes enormous public resources, and has failed to deliver measurable benefits to human mental health," said Jan Eastgate, president of CCHR International.
More on S For Story
Former NIMH director, psychiatrist Thomas Insel, who led the institute from 2002 to 2015, acknowledged this failure after more than $20 billion in spending. He admitted: "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."
Clinical psychologist Roger McFillin, Ph.D., says NIMH research has focused on the biomedical model in a futile quest to reduce human suffering to faulty genes and brain circuits, yet "suicide rates have soared" and "youth mental health collapsed." The biological paradigm, he says, "hasn't just failed, it has actively harmed by teaching people their suffering is a brain defect," pathologizing normal responses to life adversity.[5]
Meanwhile, the treatments derived from psychiatric research carry severe risks. New research shows that people who take anxiolytics, hypnotics and sedatives, and antidepressants are more likely to develop amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a progressive neurological disease, causing muscular damage. At the moment, there's no cure for the progressive debilitation that ALS causes.[6]
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS) and serotonin syndrome (SS) are acute, drug-induced medical emergencies affecting the central nervous system. NMS carries an estimated mortality rate of 5.6% to 10% and is characterized by severe muscle rigidity, hyperthermia, and altered mental status, including delirium, agitation, mutism, somnolence, and coma. Serotonin syndrome is a pharmacologically induced condition caused by excessive serotonin activity in the brain and can be life-threatening. Symptoms include anxiety, agitation, confusion, delirium, hallucinations, muscle rigidity, seizures, and coma.[7]
Dr. Josef Witt-Doering, a former Food and Drug Administration medical officer, warns that SSRI and SNRI antidepressants can leave individuals "essentially lobotomized," causing cognitive impairment alongside profound and sometimes persistent sexual dysfunction.[8]
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), used on at least 100,000 Americans each year, has been associated with significant adverse effects, including memory loss, difficulty concentrating, emotional blunting, relationship impairment, and loss of vocabulary, according to a recently published international survey of ECT recipients. Respondents also reported brain and cognitive damage.[9]
Recently, the White House cancelled nearly $28 million in federal animal-testing grants as agencies begin shifting toward non-animal research alternatives.[10]
More on S For Story
CCHR, established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and Professor of Psychiatry, Thomas Szasz, notes this step is overdue but insufficient. It urges Congress and federal oversight bodies to conduct a full financial and performance audit of NIMH mental-health research spending.
Eastgate states: "Taxpayers deserve accountability. After decades of failed science, escalating harm, and worsening mental-health outcomes, Congress must require those funded to provide measurable, real-world results."
Sources:
[1] Till Bruckner, "NIH waste far over $100 million in medical research funding every year – new study," Transparimed, 21 Feb. 2023, www.transparimed.org/single-post/nih-research-waste
[2] Amanda Hays, "10 Terrible NIMH-Funded Animal Experiments—and How You Can Help End Them," PETA, 8 Jan. 2024, www.peta.org/news/10-terrible-nimh-funded-animal-experiments/
[3] Amanda Hays, "10 Terrible NIMH-Funded Animal Experiments—and How You Can Help End Them," PETA, 8 Jan. 2024, www.peta.org/news/10-terrible-nimh-funded-animal-experiments/
[4] Senator Rand Paul, "Festivus Report, 2025," Dec. 2025, www.hsgac.senate.gov/media/reps/dr-paul-releases-2025-festivus-report-on-government-waste/; www.hsgac.senate.gov/wp-content/uploads/FESTIVUS-2025-FINAL.pdf
[5] Dr. Roger McFillin, "The Billion Dollar Brain Myth, How NIMH's biological reductionism stole hope, meaning, and billions from mental health care," Radically Genuine, 21 Nov. 2024, drmcfillin.substack.com/p/the-billion-dollar-brain-myth
[6] David Nield, "Common Psychiatric Medications May Increase Risk of ALS," Science Alert, 10 June 2025, www.sciencealert.com/common-psychiatric-medications-may-increase-risk-of-als
[7] Hannah Actor-Engel, PhD, "Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome vs Serotonin Syndrome," Neurology Advisor, 4 June 2025, www.neurologyadvisor.com/ddi/neuroleptic-malignant-syndrome-vs-serotonin-syndrome/
[8] "Mounting Evidence of Persistent Sexual Dysfunction from Antidepressants Demands FDA Action," CCHR International, 9 Jan. 2026, www.cchrint.org/2026/01/09/mounting-evidence-of-persistent-sexual-dysfunction-from-antidepressants-demands-fda-action/; Dr. Joseph Mercola, "Why Antidepressants Aren't Fixing Depression — and How the System Keeps That Truth Buried," Mercola.com, 4 Jan. 2026, articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2026/01/04/ssri-side-effects-long-term.aspx
[9] John Read, et al., "The adverse effects of electroconvulsive therapy beyond memory loss: an international survey of recipients and relatives," International Journal of Mental Health, 19 Nov. 2025, www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00207411.2025.2576946#d1e193
[10] Madeleine May, et. al., "White House slashes medical research on monkeys and other animal testing, sparking fierce new debate," CBS, 25 Sept. 2025, www.cbsnews.com/news/animal-medical-research-patients/
Research waste at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) is reportedly costing U.S. taxpayers over $100 million annually, according to analyses of completed NIH-funded trials. A review of grants completed between 2017 and 2019 found 137 clinical trials involving 41,501 children that never made their results public, despite being funded with $362 million.[1] With an annual budget of $48 billion, the NIH is the largest public funder of health, including mental health research, in the world. Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) International, a mental health industry watchdog, says transparency failures, poor patient benefits, and mounting evidence of waste are a serious concern.
CCHR says the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) merits close scrutiny. Critics note that NIMH-funded research has repeatedly shocked, brain-damaged, restrained, and dissected animals. Yet new drugs that reportedly tested "safe and effective" in animals fail in human clinical trials about 95% of the time.[2]
Across at least a dozen major U.S. universities and federal laboratories, the NIMH spent tens of millions of taxpayer dollars on invasive and often lethal animal experiments in a speculative attempt to explain human behavior. These studies have involved deliberately inducing severe psychological distress in animals; surgically implanting electrodes into the brains of monkeys, mice, bats, fish, ants, and insects; depriving animals of food or water to force compliance; simulating predator attacks through virtual reality; and ultimately killing and dissecting animals to examine their brains.[3]
Mounting Congressional concern is reflected in Senator Rand Paul's Festivus Report 2025, which exposed millions in federal spending on frivolous and cruel animal studies, including over $1 million spent on teaching teenage ferrets to binge drink alcohol and $14,643,280 to make monkeys play a "Price Is Right"-inspired video game, and more.[4]
With many individual projects costing $1–5 million each, including $25 million spent on studying fruit fly behavior, and despite decades of this funding and allegations of cruelty, there is no evidence these animal experiments have translated into meaningful improvements in mental-health outcomes for Americans. On the contrary, rates of depression, anxiety, suicide, disability, and psychiatric drug use have continued to rise, while serious adverse effects, including violence, self-harm, and chronic disability, are now widely documented. "The result is a research paradigm that inflicts extensive harm on animals, consumes enormous public resources, and has failed to deliver measurable benefits to human mental health," said Jan Eastgate, president of CCHR International.
More on S For Story
- Bold Beauty Project Announces Exhibition at Palazzo Mora Venice, Italy
- Bruce Goldwell Launches Free SizziQ Recipes Built for Stable Energy and Flavor
- Financial Educator Jessica Perrone Launches Free "3 Stages of Building Wealth" Course for Women
- Best-selling author, Apostle Tonya Releases "Healing through Scripture: Devotional and Prayers."
- Captain Notepad Expands Free Custom Design Services Across Full Product Line
Former NIMH director, psychiatrist Thomas Insel, who led the institute from 2002 to 2015, acknowledged this failure after more than $20 billion in spending. He admitted: "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."
Clinical psychologist Roger McFillin, Ph.D., says NIMH research has focused on the biomedical model in a futile quest to reduce human suffering to faulty genes and brain circuits, yet "suicide rates have soared" and "youth mental health collapsed." The biological paradigm, he says, "hasn't just failed, it has actively harmed by teaching people their suffering is a brain defect," pathologizing normal responses to life adversity.[5]
Meanwhile, the treatments derived from psychiatric research carry severe risks. New research shows that people who take anxiolytics, hypnotics and sedatives, and antidepressants are more likely to develop amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a progressive neurological disease, causing muscular damage. At the moment, there's no cure for the progressive debilitation that ALS causes.[6]
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS) and serotonin syndrome (SS) are acute, drug-induced medical emergencies affecting the central nervous system. NMS carries an estimated mortality rate of 5.6% to 10% and is characterized by severe muscle rigidity, hyperthermia, and altered mental status, including delirium, agitation, mutism, somnolence, and coma. Serotonin syndrome is a pharmacologically induced condition caused by excessive serotonin activity in the brain and can be life-threatening. Symptoms include anxiety, agitation, confusion, delirium, hallucinations, muscle rigidity, seizures, and coma.[7]
Dr. Josef Witt-Doering, a former Food and Drug Administration medical officer, warns that SSRI and SNRI antidepressants can leave individuals "essentially lobotomized," causing cognitive impairment alongside profound and sometimes persistent sexual dysfunction.[8]
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), used on at least 100,000 Americans each year, has been associated with significant adverse effects, including memory loss, difficulty concentrating, emotional blunting, relationship impairment, and loss of vocabulary, according to a recently published international survey of ECT recipients. Respondents also reported brain and cognitive damage.[9]
Recently, the White House cancelled nearly $28 million in federal animal-testing grants as agencies begin shifting toward non-animal research alternatives.[10]
More on S For Story
- Bruce Goldwell Releases "The 7-Minute Youth Reset After 60"
- Sycor Introduces Spring Release 2026 of Sycor.Rental with AI-Driven Innovations and Enhanced Service Processes
- YOKE Expands NIL Club Into Athlete-Led Commerce With Athlete Merch Launch
- Floor Kings Announces Official Launch of Premier Epoxy Flooring Services Across Arizona
- UK Buyers Purchase Luxury Home in Keene's Pointe, Windermere (Orlando, Florida)
CCHR, established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and Professor of Psychiatry, Thomas Szasz, notes this step is overdue but insufficient. It urges Congress and federal oversight bodies to conduct a full financial and performance audit of NIMH mental-health research spending.
Eastgate states: "Taxpayers deserve accountability. After decades of failed science, escalating harm, and worsening mental-health outcomes, Congress must require those funded to provide measurable, real-world results."
Sources:
[1] Till Bruckner, "NIH waste far over $100 million in medical research funding every year – new study," Transparimed, 21 Feb. 2023, www.transparimed.org/single-post/nih-research-waste
[2] Amanda Hays, "10 Terrible NIMH-Funded Animal Experiments—and How You Can Help End Them," PETA, 8 Jan. 2024, www.peta.org/news/10-terrible-nimh-funded-animal-experiments/
[3] Amanda Hays, "10 Terrible NIMH-Funded Animal Experiments—and How You Can Help End Them," PETA, 8 Jan. 2024, www.peta.org/news/10-terrible-nimh-funded-animal-experiments/
[4] Senator Rand Paul, "Festivus Report, 2025," Dec. 2025, www.hsgac.senate.gov/media/reps/dr-paul-releases-2025-festivus-report-on-government-waste/; www.hsgac.senate.gov/wp-content/uploads/FESTIVUS-2025-FINAL.pdf
[5] Dr. Roger McFillin, "The Billion Dollar Brain Myth, How NIMH's biological reductionism stole hope, meaning, and billions from mental health care," Radically Genuine, 21 Nov. 2024, drmcfillin.substack.com/p/the-billion-dollar-brain-myth
[6] David Nield, "Common Psychiatric Medications May Increase Risk of ALS," Science Alert, 10 June 2025, www.sciencealert.com/common-psychiatric-medications-may-increase-risk-of-als
[7] Hannah Actor-Engel, PhD, "Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome vs Serotonin Syndrome," Neurology Advisor, 4 June 2025, www.neurologyadvisor.com/ddi/neuroleptic-malignant-syndrome-vs-serotonin-syndrome/
[8] "Mounting Evidence of Persistent Sexual Dysfunction from Antidepressants Demands FDA Action," CCHR International, 9 Jan. 2026, www.cchrint.org/2026/01/09/mounting-evidence-of-persistent-sexual-dysfunction-from-antidepressants-demands-fda-action/; Dr. Joseph Mercola, "Why Antidepressants Aren't Fixing Depression — and How the System Keeps That Truth Buried," Mercola.com, 4 Jan. 2026, articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2026/01/04/ssri-side-effects-long-term.aspx
[9] John Read, et al., "The adverse effects of electroconvulsive therapy beyond memory loss: an international survey of recipients and relatives," International Journal of Mental Health, 19 Nov. 2025, www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00207411.2025.2576946#d1e193
[10] Madeleine May, et. al., "White House slashes medical research on monkeys and other animal testing, sparking fierce new debate," CBS, 25 Sept. 2025, www.cbsnews.com/news/animal-medical-research-patients/
Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights International
0 Comments
Latest on S For Story
- #WeAreGreekWarriors Opening Reception Packs the House
- Mensa Brings National Board Game Competition to Northern Virginia April 16-19
- Jeffrey Alan Gruhlke Announces "7 Days of Revelations" — The True Divine Series Release Schedule for July 7–13, 2026
- Special Alert! Highly Undervalued Stock: $317M Revenue in 2025 for Telecom Leader IQSTEL, Inc. (N A S D A Q: IQST)
- Igniting High-Growth Transformation With Launch of XMax AI Subsidiary, Leveraging Global Furniture Dominance to Enter Explosive AI Markets: XMax Inc
- Acuvance Earns 2026 Great Place to Work® Certification
- Wordeee Announces the Publication of Gwen Stokes' "A Life Wrapped in Lies: Searching for Truth"
- Local Author Candace J. Thomas Featured on NYT Best Selling Author Brandon Mull's Podcast
- As Global Tensions Rise, Demand Grows for Private Spaces to Process Thoughts and Speak Freely Online
- Award-Winning Bilingual Children's Author's Book Featured in Mesa Public Library
- Cryptsoft demonstrates Hybrid-PQC Authentication Token use for quantum-safe systems and infrastructure
- Expert Law Attorneys' Top Law Firms to Know: March 2026
- Wordeee Publishes Beloved Television Personality Judge Hatchett's "GOAL GIRLS"
- Sudi Mohamud Releases Fighting for Tomorrow, a Powerful Story of Motherhood, Illness, and Resilience
- Thorn & Bloom Magazine Releases Fifth Issue: Rooted & Ruptured
- Green Office Partner Strengthens Global Operations with Mexico-Based DigitalVAAR Partnership
- P-Wave Classics Announces the Publication of The Female Quixote, Volume I, by Charlotte Lennox
- Everwild Music Festival Unveils 2026 Schedule: No Overlapping Sets, Longer Performances, and Epic Late-Night Sets!
- Book Six in Kilpack's Award-Winning Epic Fantasy Series On Sale Now
- New Leadership Book Offers 5-Stage Model to Help Managers Reduce Turnover and Build Future Leaders
