-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

Dave Hartley
http://www.asheville-computer.com/dave



"One can understand now why prevention has been a failure because
the only way to achieve effective results is through fundamental social
change; in other words, this isn't a public health issue in any
conventional sense but a social and political struggle."


WSWS : News & Analysis : North America

Mental illness and the American Dream: Part 1
        http://www.wsws.org/articles/2000/mar2000/ment-m24.shtml



A comment by Frank Brenner
24 March 2000

This is the first of a two-part series.

THE SURGEON-GENERAL'S REPORT

The numbers tell a nightmare. According to a major report on mental health
recently issued by Surgeon-General David Satcher, the top public health
official in the US, one in five Americans suffers from a diagnosable
mental disorder each year and half the entire population have such
disorders at some time in their lives.[1] Half the population! A
staggering figure, hard to get one's head around: is a term like epidemic
even adequate to characterize a situation of this magnitude? And yet,
horrifying as these numbers are, they aren't that surprising, certainly
not to anyone professionally involved in the field nor, I suspect, to a
large section of the general public. If the discussions I've had or heard
on this issue are anything to go by, a not uncommon reaction to this
information is: "Only half?" It isn't just that everyone seems to know
someone who's had "mental problems" or that, with the wholesale shutdown
of mental hospitals, the mentally ill (and the wretchedness of their
lives) have become a much more visible presence on city streets; it is
also the widespread feeling these days that people no longer have much (or
any) control over their lives and hence that there is something "crazy"
about what is happening to them.

There are a lot more numbers in the report, most of them tokens of
suffering:

* mental illness, including suicide, is the Number 2 cause of disability
(defined as " years of life lost to premature death and years lived with a
disability of specified severity and duration" ), less than heart disease
but worse than cancer and AIDS combined;

* a fifth of all children show signs and symptoms of a diagnosable mental
disorder in any given year, though only 5 percent suffer " extreme
functional impairment" ;

* among adults, ages 18 to 54, 15 percent suffer anxiety disorders, 7
percent have mood disorders and a little over 1 percent have
schizophrenia;

* depression is common among people 65 and older - this is the age group
with the highest suicide rates, though the report offers the dubious
consolation that " suicidal thoughts are sometimes considered a normal
facet of old age."

Five hundred pages long, the report ( Mental Health: A Report of the
Surgeon General) brings together a huge amount of data from the findings
of hundreds of recent studies. It would be hard to imagine a more
comprehensive document: this is the state of the art, as far as mental
health is concerned, at the end of the twentieth century. And, as The New
York Times points out, it carries added significance because it " puts the
imprimatur of the government on the findings" ; the hope of those involved
is that, like the 1964 Surgeon-General's report on smoking, this new
report will become a catalyst for a major shift in public attitudes to
mental illness.[2] Accordingly, the basic tone of the report (to use
current bureaucratic jargon) is "pro-active": though the suffering due to
mental illness is widespread, the expert opinion of the report is that
most of that suffering is avoidable. One of the document's key findings is
that nearly two-thirds of people who have mental disorders don't seek
treatment, even though effective treatments already exist. The report
highlights a number of reasons for this: simple ignorance that one has a
disorder or that it can be treated; a fear of being stigmatized as
mentally ill by family and friends; and - what is no doubt the decisive
factor for a great many people - the fact that they can't afford treatment
since they have no medical insurance or else the insurance they do have
doesn't cover mental illness.

Changing attitudes to mental illness and improving access to treatment
are, of course, laudable aims. Not so laudable is what the report says (or
doesn't say) about how to achieve them. It insists that its proposals
won't cost a lot of money; similarly, it assures HMOs and medical insurers
that cost increases from covering mental illness would be minimal. This is
nonsense: if the great bulk of people who need help and aren't now getting
it start showing up for treatment, it's obvious that they could only be
accommodated by a major expansion of mental health services, and that
means a major increase in funding. Why this denying of the obvious?
Because to admit it would clash directly with the economic agenda of the
Clinton administration (which, in case anyone missed the point, let it be
known when the report came out that it " was not seeking a big budget
increase"  to fund any new initiative on mental health). And, as to the
insurance industry, the Surgeon-General has no power to compel it to
change its coverage while Congress, which does have the power, is hardly
likely to do much about a "frill" like mental health when it won't even
act to provide rudimentary medical insurance to more than 40 million of
its citizens. You can't help feeling, with reports like this, a sense of
deja vu all over again - well-meaning rhetoric, a few more stock speeches
from the Clinton crowd about "feeling your pain" and, at the end of the
day, nothing changes, the misery goes on.

But sadly predictable as that is, it isn't the most troubling thing about
the report. At least if we knew why so many people are afflicted by mental
illness, that would make a big difference in understanding not only what
the illness is but also what needs to be done to overcome it. And you
would expect in a comprehensive document like this, where the primary
objective is to educate public opinion and heighten awareness of this
problem, that the causes of mental illness would be a major focus of
discussion. But this isn't the case at all; instead we are told: " The
precise causes of most mental disorders are not known."  In some ways,
this statement is more frightening than the statistics on mental illness.
How can you effectively treat these disorders, to say nothing of
preventing them, if you don't know what gives rise to them in the first
place? And what accounts for this ignorance at the end of a century that
has seen remarkable progress in medicine on virtually every other front
and when the illness we are dealing with is not some mysterious new
outbreak but an affliction that has been around for a very long time?

A PICTURE FROM HELL

What the report has to say in addressing these issues doesn't provide much
comfort. First, it contends that while precise causes may be unknown, "
the broad forces that shape [mental disorders] are known: these are
biological, psychological, and social/cultural factors."  But this is so
broad that it really tells us very little. What aspect of an individual's
life isn't covered by " biological, psychological, and social/cultural
factors" ? One might as well say that, "broadly speaking", you have to be
alive in order to be mentally ill. What we need to know is which factor is
the decisive one; otherwise, we're still wandering in the dark. And that's
just where we seem to be when it comes to the crucial question of
prevention: the Surgeon-General admits that " progress in developing
preventive interventions has been slow"  because, of course, how can you
be effective in preventing a disease if you don't know why it's happening?

And you have to wonder about treatment as well, even though the report
keeps insisting that most disorders can be treated successfully. Given
that the causes are unknown, mental disorders are defined " by signs,
symptoms, and functional impairments,"  and it is these that get treated.
In medicine, if all you can do is treat the symptom rather than the
disease, this is an admission of failure, not a sign of success. What is
more, if you are treating only symptoms, how can you be sure that the
treatment isn't actually making the patient worse? In this regard, the
pervasive use of extremely powerful drugs within psychiatric treatment is
deeply troubling: the concern seems far less with curing patients than
with tranquilizing them to the point that they stop being a "problem." The
report admits that financial considerations play a role here, and it isn't
hard to see that drugs are much more "cost-effective" than psychotherapy,
which takes a long time and therefore costs a lot of money. A cheap way to
police an unruly population - to an appalling extent, that is what this
kind of "treatment" seems to be about. (Which isn't to say that all drugs
are always bad: as a last resort, they clearly have a legitimate role, but
what is appalling is the extent to which they have become a first resort.)

As if that weren't disturbing enough, it seems that electroconvulsive
therapy (ECT) - better known as shock treatment - is making a comeback.
Though the horror stories from the past associated with this kind of
treatment are widely known, the report assures us that things have changed
and that now ECT is safe and effective. But this isn't how patients who
have been subjected to this treatment see it. A group called the Committee
for Truth in Psychiatry, made up of ex-ECT patients, expressed its outrage
over the Surgeon-General's recommendation, saying that the report largely
ignored evidence of the treatment's harmful effects, including permanent
memory loss and brain damage. (The group also pointed out that 15 of the
citations used by the report on ECT were from " men with known financial
ties to ECT machine companies"  and that the Surgeon-General's claim that
modern ECT uses one-third less electricity than earlier versions is
actually not true.)[3]

The deeper you dig, the darker the story gets. Just how dark is evident in
the response of one advocacy group (the National Mental Health Consumers'
Self-Help Clearinghouse) to the Surgeon-General's report: Noting that
about a third of all homeless people have a mental illness, the group goes
on to say: " Meanwhile, there are still far too many people warehoused in
state mental institutions; there is an ever-increasing utilization of a
barbaric procedure called electroconvulsive therapy; there are too many
patients misdiagnosed and drugged beyond sensibility; there are huge
numbers of people with mental illness dumped into the community with
little in the way of follow-up care." [4] To complete this picture from
hell, it should be added that many of those"  dumped"  in the community
end up in jail - about 200,000 inmates, 10 percent of the national prison
population, have mental illnesses.[5]

THE MIND AND THE BRAIN

Amid these horrors, the report's attempt to explain why we are still so
ignorant about the causes of mental illness provides an amusing interlude.
It seems that Rene Descartes is to blame. The crime of the seventeenth
century French philosopher was his conceptualizing of the mind as
completely separable from the body. This " partitioning"  of mind and body
" ushered in a separation between so-called mental' and physical' health"
which has bedeviled the mental health field throughout most of this
century. Even the stigma attached to mental illness stems in part " from
the misguided split between mind and body first proposed by Descartes."
But not to worry: in the last few decades, this split has finally begun to
be overcome due to the " breathtaking progress"  made by " modern
integrative neuroscience."

It's odd to run into a reference to philosophy in a scientific paper,
especially in America, where there is a deeply ingrained prejudice against
theoretical thought. Still, in this case, the result isn't very
enlightening. If philosophical speculations four centuries ago (albeit of
a great and influential thinker) are responsible for the current impasse
of an entire branch of science, then this itself calls for some
explanation. Every science has had to contend with unscientific thinking
of one kind or another: Newton, for instance, spent more time on alchemy
than gravity and even Einstein left the door open for a divine maker of
the universe (as does Stephen Hawking), yet none of this has brought
physics to its knees. Ideas don't exist in a vacuum, and if an entire
discipline persists in holding on to misguided ideas for so long, it can
only be because those ideas serve some other, nonscientific, purpose.
Besides, blaming Descartes is a dodge: the real problem that has plagued
the mental health field isn't the partitioning of mind and body but rather
a crudely mechanical outlook which "reduces" the mind to biology. Far from
addressing the misguided nature of that outlook, the report
enthusiastically endorses what amounts to a refurbished version of it.

This is the " modern integrative neuroscience"  touted by the report as a
great leap forward.

Its basic outlook is evident in its name: the focus is on the brain and
consequently mental illness is to be understood essentially in biological
terms, as diseases of the brain. According to the report, " Mental
functions, which are disturbed in mental disorders, are mediated by the
brain. In the process of transforming human experience into physical
events, the brain undergoes changes in cellular structure and function."
Get at those changes and you have the key to understanding and treating
mental illness. As a general approach, there isn't anything new about
this: "insanity is brain disease" was already a basic tenet of psychology
in the nineteenth century and, more broadly, the treatment of mental
disorders as physiological illnesses has been the traditional standpoint
of the psychiatric profession since its origins; indeed the belief in this
position is so fundamental that it has been enshrined in the requirement
(at least in North America) that psychiatrists have medical degrees.

But there is a big problem with this approach: for most mental illnesses,
it's impossible to find a physiological cause. As the report admits, "
there is no definitive lesion, laboratory test, or abnormality in brain
tissue that can identify [mental] illness."  So, it would appear that most
people with mental illnesses have normal brains. And, it needs to be
added, people whose brains aren't normal are suffering from neurological
disorders, not mental illnesses. Again, this isn't news: the problems with
treating mental illness as brain disease were already evident at the
beginning of the twentieth century, and gave rise to radically different
approaches to psychology, notably Freudian psychoanalysis. A century has
gone by, one in which all sorts of technological marvels have been
developed which allow us to probe the brain as never before and understand
its workings right down to the cellular level (though obviously our
knowledge of the brain is still far from exhaustive). And yet, as
important as these discoveries have been for neurology, they have made
virtually no difference to the treatment of mental illness.

Why? Because mind and brain aren't the same thing. Of course you can't
have a mind without a brain, but that doesn't mean that the one is
reducible to the other: it's just as misguided to ignore their differences
as to contend that they have no relationship at all. Though the brain
provides the physiological potential for the mind, the realization of that
potential can only take place through the individual's interaction with
other human beings, i.e., through society. (This is why children who are
locked away for long periods and denied such interactions inevitably
suffer serious mental impairments.) To reduce the mind to the brain is to
blot out the fundamental role of society in mental development. And if the
mental health field keeps sticking to this misguided reductionism, despite
its long-standing failure to produce results, this must mean that there is
a powerful resistance to examining this social factor.

AN IDEOLOGICAL BLIND SPOT

The report claims that the new neuroscience isn't really reductionist.
There are repeated references to " sociocultural,"  " experiential"  or "
environmental"  factors, and the report emphasizes the "integrative"
nature of the new science. But what is telling about these references is
their vagueness - a term like "environmental" factors can mean virtually
anything - whereas, when it comes to the neuroscience side of things, the
language is much more concrete. Addressing the issue directly, the report
states: " The study of the brain requires reducing problems initially to
bite-sized bits that will allow investigators to learn something, but
ultimately, the agenda of neuroscience is not reductionist; the goal is to
understand behavior, not to put blinders on and try to explain it away."
This is at best a tenuous acknowledgment of the problem (since the crux of
the matter is how one gets from " bite-sized bits"  of brain science to a
meaningful understanding of human behavior), but even this is largely
undercut in the next paragraph: " Ultimately, however, the goal is not
only human self-understanding. In knowing eventually precisely what goes
wrong in what circuits and what synapses and with what chemical signals,
the hope is to develop treatments with greater effectiveness and with
fewer side effects."  So, human self-understanding is all well and good
(take that, Socrates and Aristotle!), but what we really need to get down
to are those circuits, synapses and chemical signals.

(In practice, the reductionism is much more flagrant. Recently, a Canadian
research team made headlines by claiming to have found a genetic link to
suicide. The claim was hailed by the press as " confirming a
2,000-year-old belief that self-destructiveness runs in families"  and it
immediately gave rise to speculation about a " suicide test"  which could
screen people for the particular genetic marker.[6] It turns out that the
study, involving only 120 patients, had actually come up with a "
bite-sized bit"  of information apparently linking a genetic mutation to
lower impulse control in the brain; add to this the fact that suicides are
often impulsive and presto - you have a gene for suicide! The whole
question as to why people should have suicidal impulses in the first place
gets completely overshadowed, and the most advanced medical techniques are
enlisted to confirm age-old prejudices about suicide and mental illness
generally.)

As the old saying goes, there are none so blind as those who will not see.
If the brain isn't responsible for mental illness, then society must be.
Mental illnesses are social diseases. And this is confirmed by a number of
their features, which are inexplicable from a reductionist perspective:

* There is " no bright line separating [mental] health from illness;"
rather the two are part of a " continuum."  Just the opposite would be
true if mental illness were really brain disease. The social character of
these terms is evident in their definitions: " mental health is a state of
successful performance of mental function, resulting in productive
activities, fulfilling relationships with other people, and the ability to
adapt to change and to cope with adversity."  Mental illness, on the other
hand, is " characterized by alterations in thinking, mood or behavior
associated with distress and/or impaired functioning."  It is
"functioning" that is the key term here, and this is a social criterion:
you are well if you can function within this society and you are ill if
you cannot.

* The report admits that " what it means to be mentally healthy is subject
to many different interpretations that are rooted in value judgments that
may vary across cultures."  A virus knows no borders. If mental health and
illness are rooted in cultural values, this only confirms their social
character. The same goes for the impact that socioeconomic status, gender
and race have on mental disorders.

* The report notes that " relatively few mental illnesses have an
unremitting character ... rather, for reasons that are not yet understood,
the symptoms associated with mental illness tend to wax and wane."  Once
these are seen as social diseases, this waxing and waning isn't such an
enigma: it clearly bears some correlation (though a highly complicated
one) to the waxing and waning of the social pressures which caused the
initial breakdown in the individual's ability to function.

Something else that now becomes apparent is why there is such resistance
in the mental health field to understanding mental illness this way. Can
anyone imagine the Surgeon-General of the United States issuing a major
report declaring that the epidemic of mental illness in America is due to
... American society? This is inconceivable because the social and
political implications of such a report would be explosive. It is ideology
which is the determining factor here, not science. This isn't to impugn
the motives of the professionals who contributed to the report or even,
probably, of Surgeon-General Satcher himself. What we are dealing with
here isn't cynicism but an ideological blind spot: how could it be that
the best, the wealthiest, the most advanced society in the world, the apex
of human civilization, is responsible for the terrible ravages of mental
illness? This is the ideological blind spot that cripples the mental
health field (as it does other social sciences in capitalist society). If
an individual can't function in this society, then surely the problem is
within the individual, in his brain or his genes, etc. But what happens
when the number of such individuals keeps growing and growing, when we
finally reach a point where half the population can't, at one time or
another, function? Who, then, is really sick - the individual or society?

The recognition that mental illnesses are social diseases doesn't make the
problems of the mental health field any easier, but it does make them
clearer. One can understand now why prevention has been a failure because
the only way to achieve effective results is through fundamental social
change; in other words, this isn't a public health issue in any
conventional sense but a social and political struggle. Even if we
consider practical measures that can be taken now (i.e., within a sick
society), the issue of prevention inevitably brings us back to politics
because the focus of such measures should clearly be on childhood and this
would entail a major expansion of daycare and preschool programs as well
as measures to improve home life, including financial assistance for
impoverished parents and decent, affordable housing. The only thing one
can expect from the Democrats and Republicans on these issues is that they
will make matters worse, much worse: the Clinton administration, by its
destruction of welfare alone, has probably guaranteed that millions more
children will grow up to be afflicted by mental disorders.

Treatment raises similar political issues: as the epidemic grows, the
money vanishes for therapy, counseling and community support. But in a
deeper sense, a recognition of mental illness as a social disease defines
the limitations of treatment: so long as we live in a sick society, all
that treatment can amount to is "first aid", bandaging up the psychic
wounds so that patients can go on functioning in the very world that made
them sick in the first place. This isn't to downplay the value of
treatment (or at least of those treatments where the patient's needs - as
opposed to cost or "keeping him quiet" - are the primary concern): mental
illness is a painful and often devastating affliction and anything that
can alleviate it is worthwhile. But alleviating suffering isn't the same
thing as a cure, and to lose sight of that is to obscure the underlying
social conditions responsible for that suffering. The basic truth is that
there are no individual cures for a social disease.

Continued in Part Two

NOTES:
 1. Mental Health: A Report of the Surgeon General, Dec. 16, 1999. The
report is available on line at www.surgeongeneral.com
 2. The New York Times, Dec. 13, 1999
 3. Committee for Truth in Psychiatry, press release, Dec. 14, 1999
 4. The statement is available on line at www.mhselfhelp.org/politact.html
 5. The New York Times, Mar. 5, 1998
 6. Toronto National Post, Jan. 28, 2000

_________________________________________________________________

Copyright 1998-2000
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved

======================

*** NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material
is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest
in receiving the included information for research and educational
purposes. Feel free to distribute widely but PLEASE acnowledge the
source. ***

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soap-boxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to