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Subject: There's So Many Mentally Ill in America "It's NORMAL to Be Crazy"
















Are We Really That Ill?




By CHRISTOPHER 
LANE


March 26, 2008


http://nysun.com/editorials/are-we-really-ill?fark


CHICAGO - America has reached a point 
where almost half its population is described as being in some way mentally 
ill, 
and nearly a quarter of its citizens -- 67.5 million -- have taken 
antidepressants.


These statistics have sparked a widespread, 
sometimes rancorous debate about whether people are taking far more medication 
than is needed for problems that may not even be mental disorders. Studies 
indicate that 40% of all patients fall short of the diagnoses that doctors and 
psychiatrists give them, yet 200 million prescriptions are written annually in 
America to treat depression and anxiety. Those who defend such widespread use 
of 
prescription drugs insist that a significant part of the population is 
under-treated and, by inference, under-medicated. Those opposed to such rampant 
use of drugs note that diagnostic rates for bipolar disorder, in particular, 
have skyrocketed by 4,000% and that overmedication is impossible without 
ver-diagnosis.


To help settle this long-standing dispute, I studied why the number of 
recognized psychiatric disorders has ballooned so dramatically in recent 
decades. In 1980, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 
added 112 new mental disorders to its third edition, DSM-III. Fifty-eight more 
disorders appeared in the revised third edition in 1987 and fourth edition in 
1994.


With over a million copies in print, the manual is known as the bible of 
American psychiatry; certainly it is an invoked chapter and verse in schools, 
prisons, courts, and by mental-health professionals around the world. The 
addition of even one new diagnostic code has serious practical consequences. 
What, then, was the rationale for adding so many in 1980?


After several requests to the American 
Psychiatric Association, I was granted complete access to the hundreds of 
unpublished memos, letters, and even votes from the period between 1973 and 
1979, when the DSM-III task force debated each new and existing disorder. Some 
of the work was meticulous and commendable. But the overall approval process 
was 
more capricious than scientific.


DSM-III grew out of meetings that many participants described as chaotic. One 
observer later remarked that the small amount of research drawn upon was 
"really 
a hodgepodge - scattered, inconsistent, and ambiguous." The interest and 
expertise of the task force was limited to one branch of psychiatry: 
neuropsychiatry. That group met for four years before it occurred to members 
that such one-sidedness might result in bias.


Incredibly, the lists of symptoms for some disorders were knocked out in 
minutes. The field studies used to justify their inclusion sometimes involved a 
single patient evaluated by the person advocating the new disease. Experts 
pressed for the inclusion of illnesses as questionable as "chronic 
undifferentiated unhappiness disorder" and "chronic complaint disorder," whose 
traits included moaning about taxes, the weather, and even sports results.


Social phobia, later dubbed "social anxiety disorder," was one of seven new 
anxiety disorders created in 1980. At first it struck me as a serious 
condition. 
By the 1990s experts were calling it "the disorder of the decade," insisting 
that as many as one in five Americans suffers from it. Yet the complete story 
turned out to be rather more complicated. For starters, the specialist who in 
the 1960s originally recognized social anxiety - London-based Isaac Marks, a 
renowned expert on fear and panic - strongly resisted its inclusion in DSM-III 
as a separate disease category. The list of common behaviors associated with 
the 
disorder gave him pause: fear of eating alone in restaurants, avoidance of 
public toilets, and concern about trembling hands. By the time a revised task 
force added dislike of public speaking in 1987, the disorder seemed 
sufficiently 
elastic to include virtually everyone on the planet.


To counter the impression that it was turning common fears into treatable 
conditions, DSM-IV added a clause stipulating that social anxiety behaviors had 
to be "impairing" before a diagnosis was possible. But who was holding the 
prescribers to such standards? Doubtless, their understanding of impairment was 
looser than that of the task force. After all, despite the impairment clause, 
the anxiety disorder mushroomed; by 2000, it was the third most common 
psychiatric disorder in America, behind only depression and alcoholism.


Over-medication would affect fewer Americans if we could rein in such clear 
examples of over-diagnosis. We would have to set the thresholds for psychiatric 
diagnosis a lot higher, resurrecting the distinction between chronic illness 
and 
mild suffering. But there is fierce resistance to this by those who say they 
are 
fighting grave mental disorders, for which medication is the only viable 
treatment. Failure to reform psychiatry will be disastrous for public health. 



Consider that apathy, excessive shopping, and overuse of the Internet are all 
serious contenders for inclusion in the next edition of the DSM, due to appear 
in 2012. If the history of psychiatry is any guide, a new class of medication 
will soon be touted to treat them. 


Sanity must prevail: if everyone is mentally ill, then no one 
is.


Mr. Lane, a professor of English at Northwestern 
University, is the author of "Shyness: How Normal Behavior Became a 
Sickness."








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