Paula Caplan - Listen to a Veteran

Paula Caplan - Listen to a Veteran

This week on MIA Radio, we chat with Paula J. Caplan. Paula is a clinical and research psychologist, author of books and plays, playwright, actor, director, and activist. She was born and raised in Springfield, Missouri, attended Greenwood Laboratory School, received her A.B. with honors from Radcliffe College of Harvard University, and received her M.A. and Ph.D. in psychology from Duke University.

Currently, she is an Associate at the Du Bois Institute, Hutchins Center for African and African American Research, Harvard University. She has been a Fellow at the Women and Public Policy Program of the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard; a Lecturer in Harvard's Program on Women, Gender, and Sexuality in the Psychology Department. She is former Full Professor of Applied Psychology and Head of the Centre for Women's Studies in Education at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, and former Lecturer in Women's Studies and Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto.

Paula is also a passionate and steadfast advocate for service members, veterans and their families. She has written: When Johnny and Jane Come Marching Home: How All of Us Can Help Veterans and has founded the Listen to a Veteran! Project.

In this interview, we discuss Paula's work to support service members, veterans and their families, and the role psychiatric drugs have played in harming these communities.

We discuss:
  • Paula's experiences that drove her towards working in mental health and advocating for veterans, which came from her father's service in World War II. This included combat in the Battle of the Bulge.
  • After hearing her father's story that had been recorded as part of a history project, she learned her father had been a forward observer, and as result learned he had been on the front lines of the war. This led to her realizing that most American's don't understand military service and the only way of doing this, is through hearing veterans' stories.
  • Prior to the invasion of Iraq, she became concerned about the care of service members of veterans and veterans upon their return from war, and more concerned of the "psychiatrization", diagnosing and prescribing psychiatric drugs to veterans.
  • To get started in her efforts, she began by listening to a veteran share his experiences with her. The veteran talked for three hours, and Paula just listened. The next day, he called her and thanked her for listening, as he got a good night sleep for the first time in years.
  • This led to her starting Listen to a Veteran, which was originally called "When Johnny and Jane Come Marching Home". As part of this initiative, a veteran of any era can meet with another person who has volunteered to listen to the veteran share any stories or experiences they're interested in sharing.
  • Paula has faced barriers in getting this program expanded to the VA or throughout the "mainstream" mental health community because the system has been created to function based upon current "evidenced-based" best practices.
  • How Paula is positive that we are currently causing harm to veterans and that alternative approaches need to immediately be implemented throughout the Department of Defense and Department of Veterans Affairs.
  • How "therapy" needs to be dropped from the terms "art therapy", "music therapy" and the like, so we can stop pathologizing individual experiences, and instead support people in doing things that improve their overall well-being.
  • Any veterans who want to be a listener as part of Paula's Listen to a Veteran initiative, or would like to have someone listen to them, they can go to listentoaveterans.org.

Episoder(290)

Examining Psychiatric Medication Tapering and Withdrawal: The Evolving Role of Pharmacists — A Conversation with Agnes Higgins and Cathal Cadogan

Examining Psychiatric Medication Tapering and Withdrawal: The Evolving Role of Pharmacists — A Conversation with Agnes Higgins and Cathal Cadogan

Welcome to the Mad in America podcast, my name is James. Today, we are discussing the experiences of people who have attempted to stop taking psychiatric drugs. These experiences are captured in a sur...

1 Apr 32min

Spiritual Emergency and the Collective Work of Staying Alive: An Interview with Nisha Gupta

Spiritual Emergency and the Collective Work of Staying Alive: An Interview with Nisha Gupta

Nisha Gupta is an existential phenomenologist, a depth psychotherapist, a creativity scholar, and an artist. She's an Associate Professor of Psychology at the University of West Georgia and earned her...

25 Mar 48min

The Political Systems Driving Abuse in Psychiatry: An Interview with Human Rights Lawyer Alicia Ely Yamin

The Political Systems Driving Abuse in Psychiatry: An Interview with Human Rights Lawyer Alicia Ely Yamin

Alicia Ely Yamin is the Director of the Global Health and Rights Project and a lecturer at Harvard Law School. She's also an adjunct senior lecturer on health policy and management at the Harvard T.H....

18 Mar 45min

History, Eugenics, and an Inquiry into Mad Consciousness: A Conversation With Susanne Paola Antonetta

History, Eugenics, and an Inquiry into Mad Consciousness: A Conversation With Susanne Paola Antonetta

Susanne Paola Antonetta is an accomplished writer and poet, the author of numerous books, and in 2001 her book Body Toxic: An Environmental Memoir, won a prestigious American Book Award. Her latest bo...

11 Mar 49min

How Our Blindness to Context Harms Patients and Breaks Practitioners: A Conversation With Kamaldeep Bhui

How Our Blindness to Context Harms Patients and Breaks Practitioners: A Conversation With Kamaldeep Bhui

Kamaldeep Bhui is Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Oxford and Honorary Professor at Queen Mary University of London. He is internationally recognized for his groundbreaking work on cultura...

4 Mar 51min

UberTherapy and the Enshittification of our Relational Lives: Part 2 of our Interview with Elizabeth Cotton

UberTherapy and the Enshittification of our Relational Lives: Part 2 of our Interview with Elizabeth Cotton

Elizabeth Cotton is Associate Professor of Responsible Business at the University of Leicester and the founder of Surviving Work, which carries out socially engaged research on mental health and work....

18 Feb 39min

UberTherapy and the Enshittification of our Relational Lives: Part 1 of our Interview with Elizabeth Cotton

UberTherapy and the Enshittification of our Relational Lives: Part 1 of our Interview with Elizabeth Cotton

Elizabeth Cotton is Associate Professor of Responsible Business at the University of Leicester and the founder of Surviving Work, which carries out socially engaged research on mental health and work....

11 Feb 46min

Food First, Pharma Last - Part Two of our Interview with Chris Masterjohn

Food First, Pharma Last - Part Two of our Interview with Chris Masterjohn

This week, we are joined by Chris Masterjohn, PhD. Chris is a nutritional scientist, a former professor, and the founder of Mitome. With a PhD in nutritional science and years of research in mitochond...

28 Jan 44min

Populært innen Helse

fastlegen
lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
rss-gukild-johaug
hvordan-har-du-det-mann
psykodrama
leger-om-livet
rss-garne-damer
relasjonspodden-med-dora-thorhallsdottir-kjersti-idem
foreldreradet
morten-ramm-lar-kakla-ga-til-du-sovner
hjernesterk
rss-lopedrommen
klimaks
g-punktet
hormonelle-frida
bak-fasaden-en-reise-i-livet-med-sykepleier-ine
hverdagspsyken
sinnsyn
rss-kull
helsetipspodden