Bridge to Justice

When Medicine Becomes a Tool of Control

Most people believe abuse requires violence.
Bruises. Shouting. Threats.

But some of the most devastating abuse happens quietly, in homes, hospitals and care settings, under the label of “help”.

There is a form of harm few people talk about: iatrogenic and coercively enabled impairment.

It happens when medication, prescribed for pain, anxiety, or illness, impairs a person’s thinking, mood, or judgement and someone close to them uses that impairment to take control of their life.

The person may appear:

  • confused
  • irritable
  • withdrawn
  • inconsistent
  • “not themselves”

Family members may be told:

“That’s just the medication.”
“That’s the illness.”
“They don’t really mean what they’re saying.”

Over time, the impaired person loses:

  • their voice
  • their credibility
  • their independence

Someone else steps in “to help”.

How coercive impairment works in real life

The pattern is disturbingly consistent:

  1. Medication escalates
    Often opioids, benzodiazepines, sleeping tablets, or a combination.
  2. Side effects are reframed
    Confusion becomes “clarity”.
    Distress becomes “awareness”.
    Sedation becomes “peace”.
  3. A gatekeeper emerges
    One person controls access to the patient, professionals, and information.
  4. Narratives are managed
    Professionals are reassured.
    Family concerns are minimised.
    Documents are signed.
  5. The person is no longer believed
    Their changing views are blamed on illness, not influence.

This is not care.
It is control.

Why families miss it, at first

Families don’t ignore this because they don’t care.
They miss it because they trust.

They trust doctors.
They trust relatives.
They trust that “help” means protection.

By the time they realise what’s happening, the person they love may already be:

  • isolated
  • legally sidelined
  • financially exploited
  • or dying

And the system will often say:

“There is no evidence of abuse.”

Why this must be named

When something has no name, it has no safeguards.

Iatrogenic and coercively enabled impairment sits at the crossroads of:

  • elder abuse
  • coercive control
  • professional enabling
  • safeguarding failure

Until systems recognise this pattern:

  • vulnerable adults will continue to be taken over
  • families will continue to be dismissed
  • perpetrators will continue to hide behind “care”

If this sounds familiar

If you recognise this pattern in your own family:

  • trust your instinct
  • document everything
  • question narratives that silence the person at the centre
  • remember: impairment does not equal consent

And you are not alone.

Important note

This information is provided for general guidance only and does not constitute legal advice. Formal legal advice should be sought where appropriate.