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posted by martyb on Thursday July 27 2017, @07:28AM   Printer-friendly
from the call-a-spade-a-spade dept.

Common Dreams reports

As President Donald Trump continues to behave bizarrely and erratically--attacking his own attorney general, launching into a political tirade during a speech to Boy Scouts, bringing his 11-year-old son into the burgeoning Russia controversy--a professional association of psychoanalysts is telling its members to drop the so-called Goldwater Rule and comment publicly on the president's state of mind if they find reason to do so.

The Goldwater Rule was formally included in the American Psychiatric Association's "Principles of Medical Ethics" following the 1964 presidential campaign, during which a magazine editor was sued for running an article in which mental health professionals gave their opinions on [Republican] presidential candidate Barry Goldwater's psychiatric state. The rule deems public comments by psychiatrists on the mental health of public officials without consent "unethical".

In a recent email to its 3,500 members, the American Psychoanalytic Association "told its members they should not feel bound by" the Goldwater Rule, which some have characterized as a "gag rule", STAT's Sharon Begley reports.


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  • (Score: 2, Interesting) by khallow on Thursday July 27 2017, @01:25PM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Thursday July 27 2017, @01:25PM (#545160) Journal
    Except of course, they are freeing members from that part of the Goldwater Rule. Maybe it's only a partial freeing with some residual of the Goldwater Rule still in place, but the AC's point remains. And let us keep in mind that it's your words now that are stating that they are freeing members from this aspect of the Goldwater Rule.

    They are; however, allowed to make public statements based on their expertise that are not diagnoses: for example, it's fine for them to say 'based on the behaviour that I've observed, Donald Trump is a pathological narcissist,' but that is not a diagnosis and should not be treated as one.

    The public will totally dig that distinction.

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