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Depression & Mental Health FAQs
US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimated 40 million Americans living today will suffer from major depressive illness during their lives. Seasonal affective disorder is major depression that appears in the fall or winter and goes away in spring, thought to be caused by lack of sunlight.
Postpartum depression occurs within four weeks of a women giving childbirth. Most new mothers suffer from some form of the �baby blues.� Postpartum depression, by contrast, is major depression, thought to be triggered by changes in hormonal flows associated with childbirth. Catatonic depression is a rare form of major depression characterized by (at least two): Stupor, excessive motor activity, extreme negativism, peculiarities in voluntary movement, and repetition of other people's words or actions. - mcmanweb.com
Psychotic depression is a rare form of depression characterized by delusions or hallucinations, such as believing you are someone you are not and hearing voices.
According to the National Institute of Mental Health, approximately 18.8 million American adults, or about 9.5 percent of the US population age 18 and older in a given year, have a depressive disorder. Depression is a chronic illness that exacts a significant toll on
America's health and productivity. It affects more than 21 million
American children and adults annually and is the leading cause of
disability in the United States for individuals ages 15 to 44.
Lost productive time among U.S. workers due to depression is estimated
to be in excess of $31 billion per year. Depression frequently
co-occurs with a variety of medical illnesses such as heart disease,
cancer, and chronic pain and is associated with poorer health status
and prognosis. It is also the principal cause of the 30,000 suicides
in the U.S. each year. In 2004, suicide was the 11 th leading cause of death in the United States, third among individuals 15-24.
According to the World Health Organization, depression is presently on track to becoming the world's second-most disabling disease (after heart disease) by the year 2020. Depression is responsible for some $87 billion a year in lost productivity in the US (a conservative estimate), and according to Bank One, is responsible for most lost work days in its employees after pregnancy and childbirth. Additionally, one million people worldwide die by their own hand, most as a result of a mood disorder. Finally, the linkage between depression and a host of physical illnesses makes it arguably the world's greatest killer.
Research presented at the 56th Annual Conference of the Canadian
Psychiatric Association shows a marked link between bipolar disorder
and migraines. The odds of migraine in persons with bipolar disorder were 40% higher than the general population. Data
obtained from 36,984 people aged 15 and over, who screened positive for
manic or depressive episodes with migraine, were compared against those
who screened positive for mania but who didn�t suffer from migraines. Amongst
males, 14.9% of those with manic episodes were also diagnosed with
migraines compared with 5.8% of the general population. Amongst
females, 34.7% had both migraines and bipolar disorder compared with
14.7% who only had migraines.unquote.gif While the research was
skewed towards persons who were already diagnosed with bipolar
disorders, what does it mean for people who suffer from migraines but
who may have an undiagnosed bipolar disorder?
Migraines and headaches aren�t fully understood but the manifestations are very real and debilitating for their sufferers: Throbbing pain Nausea Heightened sensitivity to light or sound Seeing dots, wavy lines, flashing lights, or blind spots Difficulty with speech, sensation, or movement
An estimated 2.1 million
American adolescents have experienced major depression within the last
year, according to a new comprehensive government study. Researchers
surveyed more than 67,000 young people ages 12 to 17 and found that one
in 12 had suffered from serious depression in the previous year.Nearly
13 percent of girls had struggled with depression, compared to less
than 5 percent of boys. Odds of depression increased with age -- just 4
percent of 12-year-olds experienced depression but that climbed to 11
percent for older teens.
Our DF Members
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The Surgeon General's Report on Mental Health
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Mental Health
A Report of the Surgeon General
Executive Summary
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
U.S. Public Health Service
Suggested Citation
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Mental Health: A Report of the Surgeon General—Executive Summary.
Rockville, MD: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Substance
Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Center for Mental
Health Services, National Institutes of Health, National Institute of
Mental Health, 1999.
Message from Donna E. Shalala
Secretary of Health and Human Services
The
United States leads the world in understanding the importance of
overall health and well-being to the strength of a Nation and its
people. What we are coming to realize is that mental health is
absolutely essential to achieving prosperity. According to the landmark
“Global Burden of Disease” study, commissioned by the World Health
Organization and the World Bank, 4 of the 10 leading causes of
disability for persons age 5 and older are mental disorders. Among
developed nations, including the United States, major depression is the
leading cause of disability. Also near the top of these rankings are
manic-depressive illness, schizophrenia, and obsessive-compulsive
disorder. Mental disorders also are tragic contributors to mortality,
with suicide perennially representing one of the leading preventable
causes of death in the United States and worldwide.
The
U.S. Congress declared the 1990s the Decade of the Brain. In this
decade we have learned much through research—in basic neuroscience,
behavioral science, and genetics—about the complex workings of the
brain. Research can help us gain a further understanding of the
fundamental mechanisms underlying thought, emotion, and behavior—and an
understanding of what goes wrong in the brain in mental illness. It can
also lead to better treatments and improved services for our diverse
population.
Now, with the publication of this first
Surgeon General’s Report on Mental Health, we are poised to take what
we know and to advance the state of mental health in the Nation. We can
with great confidence encourage individuals to seek treatment when they
find themselves experiencing the signs and symptoms of mental distress.
Research has given us effective treatments and service delivery
strategies for many mental disorders. An array of safe and potent
medications and psychosocial interventions, typically used in
combination, allow us to effectively treat most mental disorders.
This
seminal report provides us with an opportunity to dispel the myths and
stigma surrounding mental illness. For too long the fear of mental
illness has been profoundly destructive to people’s lives. In fact
mental illnesses are just as real as other illnesses, and they are like
other illnesses in most ways. Yet fear and stigma persist, resulting in
lost opportunities for individuals to seek treatment and improve or
recover.
In this Administration, a persistent, courageous
advocate of affordable, quality mental health services for all
Americans is Mrs. Tipper Gore, wife of the Vice President. We salute
her for her historic leadership and for her enthusiastic support of the
initiative by the Surgeon General, Dr. David Satcher, to issue this
groundbreaking Report on Mental Health.
The 1999 White
House Conference on Mental Health called for a national antistigma
campaign. The Surgeon General issued a Call to Action on Suicide
Prevention in 1999 as well. This Surgeon General’s Report on Mental
Health takes the next step in advancing the important notion that
mental health is fundamental health.
Foreword
Since
the turn of this century, thanks in large measure to research-based
public health innovations, the lifespan of the average American has
nearly doubled. Today, our Nation’s physical health—as a whole—has
never been better. Moreover, illnesses of the body, once shrouded in
fear—such as cancer, epilepsy, and HIV/AIDS to name just a
few—increasingly are seen as treatable, survivable, even curable
ailments. Yet, despite unprecedented knowledge gained in just the past
three decades about the brain and human behavior, mental health is
often an afterthought and illnesses of the mind remain shrouded in fear
and misunderstanding.
This Report of the Surgeon General
on Mental Health is the product of an invigorating collaboration
between two Federal agencies. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration (SAMHSA), which provides national leadership
and funding to the states and many professional and citizen
organizations that are striving to improve the availability,
accessibility, and quality of mental health services, was assigned lead
responsibility for coordinating the development of the report. The
National Institutes of Health (NIH), which supports and conducts
research on mental illness and mental health through its National
Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), was pleased to be a partner in this
effort. The agencies we respectively head were able to rely on the
enthusiastic participation of hundreds of people who played a role in
researching, writing, reviewing, and disseminating this report. We wish
to express our appreciation and that of a mental health constituency,
millions of Americans strong, to Surgeon General David Satcher, M.D.,
Ph.D., for inviting us to participate in this landmark report.
The
year 1999 witnessed the first White House Conference on Mental Health
and the first Secretarial Initiative on Mental Health prepared under
the aegis of the Department of Health and Human Services. These
activities set an optimistic tone for progress that will be realized in
the years ahead. Looking ahead, we take special pride in the remarkable
record of accomplishment, in the spheres of both science and services,
to which our agencies have contributed over past decades. With the
impetus that the Surgeon General’s report provides, we intend to expand
that record of accomplishment. This report recognizes the inextricably
intertwined relationship between our mental health and our physical
health and well-being. The report emphasizes that mental health and
mental illnesses are important concerns at all ages. Accordingly, we
will continue to attend to needs that occur across the lifespan, from
the youngest child to the oldest among us.
The report
lays down a challenge to the Nation—to our communities, our health and
social service agencies, our policymakers, employers, and citizens—to
take action. SAMHSA and NIH look forward to continuing our
collaboration to generate needed knowledge about the brain and behavior
and to translate that knowledge to the service systems, providers, and
citizens.
Nelba Chavez, Ph.D. .
Administrator
Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration
Steven E. Hyman, M.D
Director
National Institute of Mental Health
for The National Institutes of Health
Bernard S. Arons, M.D.
Director
Center for Mental Health Services
Preface
from the Surgeon General
U.S. Public Health Service
The
past century has witnessed extraordinary progress in our improvement of
the public health through medical science and ambitious, often
innovative, approaches to health care services. Previous Surgeons
General reports have saluted our gains while continuing to set ever
higher benchmarks for the public health. Through much of this era of
great challenge and greater achievement, however, concerns regarding
mental illness and mental health too often were relegated to the rear
of our national consciousness. Tragic and devastating disorders such as
schizophrenia, depression and bipolar disorder, Alzheimer’s disease,
the mental and behavioral disorders suffered by children, and a range
of other mental disorders affect nearly one in five Americans in any
year, yet continue too frequently to be spoken of in whispers and
shame. Fortunately, leaders in the mental health field—fiercely
dedicated advocates, scientists, government officials, and
consumers—have been insistent that mental health flow in the mainstream
of health. I agree and issue this report in that spirit.
This
report makes evident that the neuroscience of mental health—a term that
encompasses studies extending from molecular events to psychological,
behavioral, and societal phenomena—has emerged as one of the most
exciting arenas of scientific activity and human inquiry. We recognize
that the brain is the integrator of thought, emotion, behavior, and
health. Indeed, one of the foremost contributions of contemporary
mental health research is the extent to which it has mended the
destructive split between “mental” and “physical” health.
We
know more today about how to treat mental illness effectively and
appropriately than we know with certainty about how to prevent mental
illness and promote mental health. Common sense and respect for our
fellow humans tells us that a focus on the positive aspects of mental
health demands our immediate attention.
Even more than
other areas of health and medicine, the mental health field is plagued
by disparities in the availability of and access to its services. These
disparities are viewed readily through the lenses of racial and
cultural diversity, age, and gender. A key disparity often hinges on a
person’s financial status; formidable financial barriers block off
needed mental health care from too many people regardless of whether
one has health insurance with inadequate mental health benefits, or is
one of the 44 million Americans who lack any insurance. We have allowed
stigma and a now unwarranted sense of hopelessness about the
opportunities for recovery from mental illness to erect these barriers.
It is time to take them down.
Promoting mental health for
all Americans will require scientific know-how but, even more
importantly, a societal resolve that we will make the needed
investment. The investment does not call for massive budgets; rather,
it calls for the willingness of each of us to educate ourselves and
others about mental health and mental illness, and thus to confront the
attitudes, fear, and misunderstanding that remain as barriers before
us. It is my intent that this report will usher in a healthy era of
mind and body for the Nation.
David Satcher, M.D., Ph.D.
Surgeon General
Executive Summary
A Report of the Surgeon General
On Mental Health
Mental health—the
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; from early childhood
until late life, mental health is the springboard of thinking and
communication skills, learning, emotional growth, resilience, and
self-esteem.
Mental illness—the
term that refers collectively to all mental disorders. Mental disorders
are health conditions that are characterized by alterations in
thinking, mood, or behavior (or some combination thereof) associated
with distress and/or impaired functioning.
This is
the first Surgeon General’s report ever issued on the topic of mental
health and mental illness. The science-based report conveys several
messages. One is that mental health is fundamental to health.
The qualities of mental health are essential to leading a healthy life.
Americans assign high priority to preventing disease and promoting
personal well-being and public health; so too must we assign priority
to the task of promoting mental health and preventing mental disorders.
Nonetheless, mental disorders occur and, thus, treatment and mental
health services are critical to the Nation’s health. These emphases,
combined with research to increase the knowledge needed to treat and
prevent mental and behavioral disorders, constitute a broad public
health approach to an urgent health concern.
A second message of the report is that mental disorders are real health conditions
that have an immense impact on individuals and families throughout this
Nation and the world. Appreciation of the clinically and economically
devastating nature of mental disorders is part of a quiet scientific
revolution that not only has documented the extent of the problem, but
in recent years has generated many real solutions. The decision to
publish the report at this time was based, in part, on the tremendous
growth of the science base that is enriching our understanding of the
awe-inspiring complexity of the brain and behavior. This understanding
increasingly supports mental health practices.
The body
of this report is a summary of an extensive review of the scientific
literature and of consultations with mental health care providers and
consumers. Contributors guided by the Office of the Surgeon General
examined more than 3,000 research articles and other materials,
including first-person accounts from individuals who have experienced
mental disorders. Today, a strong consensus among Americans in all
walks of life holds that our society no longer can afford to view
mental health as separate and unequal to general health. This consensus
resonates with the Surgeon General’s conviction that mental health
should be part of the mainstream of health.
The review of research supports two main findings:
- The efficacy of mental health treatments is well documented, and
- A range of treatments exists for most mental disorders.
On the strength of these findings, the single, explicit recommendation of the report is to seek help if you have a mental health problem or think you have symptoms of a mental disorder.
Once
a person has made the decision to seek help for a mental health
problem, he or she can choose from a broad variety of helping sources,
treatment approaches, and service settings. There is no “one size fits
all” treatment for mental disorders. Personal preference may influence,
for example, the choice of psychotherapeutic, or “talk,” therapy over
the use of medications; in another case, an individual may feel most
comfortable raising questions about symptoms of mental distress with a
family doctor, with a trusted member of the clergy, or, if a child’s
health is the subject of concern, with a teacher or a school counselor.
There are many individuals who are familiar with questions about mental
health care and who, as a first point of contact, can provide
invaluable assistance in obtaining appropriate and effective care.
Despite
the efficacy of treatment options and the many possible ways of
obtaining a treatment of choice, nearly half of all Americans who have
a severe mental illness do not seek treatment. Most often, reluctance
to seek care is an unfortunate outcome of very real barriers. Foremost
among these is the stigma that many in our society attach to mental
illness and to people who have a mental illness.
Stigma
erodes confidence that mental disorders are valid, treatable health
conditions. It leads people to avoid socializing, employing or working
with, or renting to or living near persons who have a mental disorder,
especially a severe disorder like schizophrenia. Stigma deters the
public from wanting to pay for care and, thus, reduces consumers’
access to resources and opportunities for treatment and social
services. A consequent inability or failure to obtain treatment
reinforces destructive patterns of low self-esteem, isolation, and
hopelessness. Stigma tragically deprives people of their dignity and
interferes with their full participation in society. It must be
overcome.
Increasingly effective treatments for mental
disorders promise to be the most effective antidote to stigma.
Effective interventions help people to understand that mental disorders
are not character flaws but are legitimate illnesses that respond to
specific treatments, just as other health conditions respond to medical
interventions. Fresh approaches to disseminating research information
are needed urgently. While they are being developed, this report
provides information that organizations, experts, and many other
individuals can use to educate all Americans about mental health and
mental illness.
Overarching Themes of the Surgeon General’s Report
Key
themes, summarized here, run throughout the report. The importance of
information, policies, and actions that will reduce and eventually
eliminate the cruel and unfair stigma attached to mental illness is
one. The importance of a solid research base for every mental health
and mental illness intervention is another. As our Nation has seen in
the past, establishing mental health policy on the basis of good
intentions alone can make bad situations worse; evaluating the
practicality and effectiveness of new approaches is efficient and, more
critically, is accountable to those for whom an intervention is
intended. Additional themes of the report include the following.
Public Health Perspective
In the United States, mental health programs, like general health programs, are rooted in a population-based public health model.
Broader in focus than medical models that concentrate on diagnosis and
treatment, public health attends, in addition, to the health of a
population in its entirety. A public health approach encompasses a
focus on epidemiologic surveillance, health promotion, disease
prevention, and access to services. Although much more is known through
research about mental illness than about mental health, the report
attaches high importance to public health practices that seek to
identify risk factors for mental health problems; to mount preventive
interventions that may block the emergence of severe illnesses; and to
actively promote good mental health.
Mental Disorders Are Disabling
The
World Health Organization, in collaboration with the World Bank and
Harvard University, mounted an ambitious research effort in the
mid-1990s to determine the “burden of disability” associated with the
whole range of diseases and health conditions suffered by peoples
throughout the world. Possibly the most striking finding of the
landmark Global Burden of Disease study is that the impact of mental
illness on overall health and productivity in the United States and
throughout the world is profoundly underrecognized. Today, in
established market economies such as the United States, mental illness
is the second leading cause of disability and premature mortality.
Mental disorders collectively account for more than 15 percent of the
overall burden of disease from all causes and slightly more
than the burden associated with all forms of cancer (Table 1). These
data underscore the importance and urgency of treating and preventing
mental disorders and of promoting mental health in our society.
Table 1. Disease burden by selected illness categories in established market economies, 1990
|
|
Percent of Total DALYs*
|
|
All cardiovascular conditions |
18.6 |
|
All mental illness** |
15.4 |
|
All malignant disease (cancer) |
15.0 |
|
All respiratory conditions |
4.8 |
|
All alcohol use |
4.7 |
|
All infectious and parasitic disease |
2.8 |
|
All drug use |
1.5 |
*Disability-adjusted
life year (DALY) is a measure that expresses years of life lost to
premature death and years lived with a disability of specified severity
and duration (Murray & Lopez, 1996).
**Disease burden associated with “mental illness” includes suicide.
Mental Health and Mental Illness: Points on a Continuum
As will be evident in the pages that follow, “mental health” and “mental illness” may be thought of as points on a continuum. Mental health
refers to the 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
health is indispensable to personal well-being, family and
interpersonal relationships, and contribution to community or society.
It is easy to overlook the value of mental health until problems
surface. Yet from early childhood until death, mental health is the
springboard of thinking and communication skills, learning, emotional
growth, resilience, and self-esteem. These are the ingredients of each
individual’s successful contribution to community and society.
Americans are inundated with messages about success—in school,
in a profession, in parenting, in relationships—without appreciating
that successful performance rests on a foundation of mental health.
Many
ingredients of mental health may be identifiable, but mental health is
not easy to define. In the words of a distinguished leader in the field
of mental health prevention, “. . . built into any definition of
wellness . . . are overt and covert expressions of values. Because
values differ across cultures as well as among subgroups (and indeed
individuals) within a culture, the ideal of a uniformly acceptable
definition of the construct is illusory. . .” (Cowen, 1994). In other
words, what it means to be mentally healthy is subject to many
different interpretations that are rooted in value judgments that may
vary across cultures. The challenge of defining mental health has
stalled the development of programs to foster mental health (Secker,
1998), although some strides have been made—for example, wellness
programs for older people.
Mental illness refers
collectively to all diagnosable mental disorders. Mental disorders are
health conditions that are characterized by alterations in thinking,
mood, or behavior (or some combination thereof) associated with
distress and/or impaired functioning. Alzheimer’s disease exemplifies a
mental disorder largely marked by alterations in thinking (especially
forgetting). Depression exemplifies a mental disorder largely marked by
alterations in mood. Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
exemplifies a mental disorder largely marked by alterations in behavior
(overactivity) and/or thinking (inability to concentrate). Alterations
in thinking, mood, or behavior spawn a host of problems—patient
distress, impaired functioning, or heightened risk of death, pain,
disability, or loss of freedom (DSM-IV, 1994).
This
report uses the term “mental health problems” for signs and symptoms of
insufficient intensity or duration to meet the criteria for any mental
disorder. Almost everyone has experienced mental health problems in
which the distress one feels matches some of the signs and symptoms of
mental disorders. Mental health problems may warrant active efforts in
health promotion, prevention, and treatment. Bereavement symptoms in
older adults offer a case in point. Bereavement symptoms of less than 2
months’ duration do not qualify as a mental disorder, according to
professional manuals for diagnosis (DSM-IV, 1994). Nevertheless,
bereavement symptoms can be debilitating if they are left unattended.
They place older people at risk for depression, which, in turn, is
linked to death from suicide, heart attack, or other causes (Zisook
& Shuchter, 1991, 1993; Frasure-Smith et al., 1993, 1995; Conwell,
1996). Much can be done—through formal treatment or through support
group participation—to ameliorate the symptoms and to avert the
consequences of bereavement. In this case, early intervention is needed
to address a mental health problem before it becomes a disorder.
Mind and Body Are Inseparable
As
it examines mental health and illness in the United States, the report
confronts a profound obstacle to public understanding, one that stems
from an artificial, centuries-old separation of mind and body.
Even
today, everyday language encourages a misperception that mental health
or mental illness is unrelated to physical health or physical illness.
In fact, the two are inseparable. In keeping with modern scientific
thinking, this report uses mind to refer to all mental functions
related to thinking, mood, and purposive behavior. The mind is
generally seen as deriving from activities within the brain. Research
reviewed for this report makes it clear that mental functions are
carried out by a particular organ, the brain. Indeed, new and emerging
technologies are making it increasingly possible for researchers to
demonstrate the extent to which mental disorders and their
treatment—both with medication and with psychotherapy—are reflected in
physical changes in the brain.
Scope of the Report and General Conclusions
Chapter 1: Introduction and Themes
Chapter
1 of the report elaborates on the overarching themes highlighted above
and describes the criteria applied to the scientific evidence that is
cited through-out the report. The chapter also lists the key
conclusions drawn from each succeeding chapter. These conclusions are
provided, as well, in the following pages of this Executive Summary.
Chapter 2: The Fundamentals of Mental Health and Mental Illness
The past 25 years have been marked by several discrete, defining trends in the mental health field. These have included:
- The extraordinary pace and productivity of scientific research on the brain and behavior;
- The introduction of a range of effective treatments for most mental disorders;
- A dramatic transformation of our society’s approaches to the organization and financing of mental health care; and
- The emergence of powerful consumer and family movements.
Scientific Research.
The brain has emerged as the central focus for studies of mental health
and mental illness. New scientific disciplines, technologies, and
insights have begun to weave a seamless picture of the way in which the
brain mediates the influence of biological, psychological, and social
factors on human thought, behavior, and emotion in health and in
illness. Molecular and cellular biology and molecular genetics, which
are complemented by sophisticated cognitive and behavioral science, are
preeminent research disciplines in the contemporary neuroscience of
mental health. These disciplines are affording unprecedented
opportunities for “bottom-up” studies of the brain. This term refers to
research that is examining the workings of the brain at the most
fundamental levels. Studies focus, for example, on the complex
neurochemical activity that occurs within individual nerve cells, or
neurons, to process information; on the properties and roles of
proteins that are expressed, or produced, by a person’s genes; and on
the interaction of genes with diverse environmental influences. All of
these activities now are understood, with increasing clarity, to
underlie learning, memory, the experience of emotion, and, when these
processes go awry, the occurrence of mental illness or a mental health
problem.
Equally important to the mental health field is
“top-down” research; here, as the term suggests, the aim is to
understand the broader behavioral context of the brain’s cellular and
molecular activity and to learn how individual neurons work together in
well-delineated neural circuits to perform mental functions.
Effective Treatments.
As information accumulates about the basic workings of the brain, it is
the task of translational research to transfer new knowledge into
clinically relevant questions and targets of research opportunity—to
discover, for example, what specific properties of a neural circuit
might make it receptive to safer, more effective medications. To
elaborate on this example, theories derived from knowledge about basic
brain mechanisms are being wedded more closely to brain imaging tools
such as functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) that can observe
actual brain activity. Such a collaboration would permit investigators
to monitor the specific protein molecules intended as the “targets” of
a new medication to treat a mental illness or, indeed, to determine how
to optimize the effect on the brain of the learning achieved through
psychotherapy.
In its entirety, the new “integrative
neuroscience” of mental health offers a way to circumvent the
antiquated split between the mind and the body that historically has
hampered mental health research. It also makes it possible to examine
scientifically many of the important psychological and behavioral
theories regarding normal development and mental illness that have been
developed in years past. The unswerving goal of mental health research
is to develop and refine clinical treatments as well as preventive
interventions that are based on an understanding of specific mechanisms
that can contribute to or lead to illness but also can protect and
enhance mental health.
Mental health clinical research
encompasses studies that involve human participants, conducted, for
example, to test the efficacy of a new treatment. A noteworthy feature
of contemporary clinical research is the new emphasis being placed on
studying the effectiveness of interventions in actual practice
settings. Information obtained from such studies increasingly provides
the foundation for services research concerned with the cost,
cost-effectiveness, and “deliverability” of interventions and the
design—including economic considerations—of service delivery systems.
Organization and Financing of Mental Health Care.
Another of the defining trends has been the transformation of the
mental illness treatment and mental health services landscapes,
including increased reliance on primary health care and other human
service providers. Today, the U.S. mental health system is multifaceted
and complex, comprising the public and private sectors, general health
and specialty mental health providers, and social services, housing,
criminal justice, and educational agencies. These agencies do not
always function in a coordinated manner. The configuration of the
system reflects necessary responses to a broad array of factors
including reform movements, financial incentives based on who pays for
what kind of services, and advances in care and treatment technology.
Although the hybrid system that exists today serves diverse functions
well for many people, individuals with the most complex needs and the
fewest financial resources often find the system fragmented and
difficult to use. A challenge for the Nation in the near-term future is
to speed the transfer of new evidence-based treatments and prevention
interventions into diverse service delivery settings and systems, while
ensuring greater coordination among these settings and systems.
Consumer and Family Movements.
The emergence of vital consumer and family movements promises to shape
the direction and complexion of mental health programs for many years
to come. Although divergent in their historical origins and philosophy,
organizations representing consumers and family members have promoted
important, often overlapping, goals and have invigorated the fields of
research as well as treatment and service delivery design. Among the
principal goals shared by much of the consumer movement are to overcome
stigma and prevent discrimination in policies affecting persons with
mental illness; to encourage self-help and a focus on recovery from
mental illness; and to draw attention to the special needs associated
with a particular disorder or disability as well as with age or gender
or by the racial and cultural identity of those who have mental illness.
Chapter
2 of the report was written to provide background information that
would help persons from outside the mental health field better
understand topics addressed in subsequent chapters of the report.
Although the chapter is meant to serve as a mental health primer, its
depth of discussion supports a range of conclusions:
- The
multifaceted complexity of the brain is fully consistent with the fact
that it supports all behavior and mental life. Proceeding from an
acknowledgment that all psychological experiences are recorded
ultimately in the brain and that all psychological phenomena reflect
biological processes, the modern neuroscience of mental health offers
an enriched understanding of the inseparability of human experience,
brain, and mind.
- 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 its cellular structure and function.
- Few lesions or physiologic abnormalities
define the mental disorders, and for the most part their causes remain
unknown. Mental disorders, instead, are defined by signs, symptoms, and
functional impairments.
- Diagnoses of mental disorders made using specific criteria are as reliable as those for general medical disorders.
- About
one in five Americans experiences a mental disorder in the course of a
year. Approximately 15 percent of all adults who have a mental disorder
in one year also experience a co-occurring substance (alcohol or other
drug) use disorder, which complicates treatment.
- A range of treatments of well-documented
efficacy exists for most mental disorders. Two broad types of
intervention include psychosocial treatments—for example, psychotherapy
or counseling—and psychopharmacologic treatments; these often are most
effective when combined.
- In the mental health field, progress in
developing preventive interventions has been slow because, for most
major mental disorders, there is insufficient understanding about
etiology (or causes of illness) and/or there is an inability to alter
the known etiology of a particular disorder. Still, some
successful strategies have emerged in the absence of a full
understanding of etiology.
- About 10 percent of the U.S. adult
population use mental health services in the health sector in any year,
with another 5 percent seeking such services from social service
agencies, schools, or religious or self-help groups. Yet critical gaps
exist between those who need service and those who receive service.
- Gaps also exist between optimally effective treatment and what many individuals receive in actual practice settings.
- Mental
illness and less severe mental health problems must be understood in a
social and cultural context, and mental health services must be
designed and delivered in a manner that is sensitive to the
perspectives and needs of racial and ethnic minorities.
- The consumer movement has increased the
involvement of individuals with mental disorders and their families in
mutual support services, consumer-run services, and advocacy. They are
powerful agents for changes in service programs and policy.
- The notion of recovery reflects renewed
optimism about the outcomes of mental illness, including that achieved
through an individual’s own self-care efforts, and the opportunities
open to persons with mental illness to participate to the full extent
of their interests in the community of their choice.
Mental Health and Mental Illness Across the Lifespan
The
Surgeon General’s report takes a lifespan approach to its consideration
of mental health and mental illness. Three chapters that address,
respectively, the periods of childhood and adolescence, adulthood, and
later adult life beginning somewhere between ages 55 and 65, capture
the contributions of research to the breadth, depth, and vibrancy that
characterize all facets of the contemporary mental health field.
The
disorders featured in depth in Chapters 3, 4, and 5 were selected on
the basis of the frequency with which they occur in our society, and
the clinical, societal, and economic burden associated with each. To
the extent that data permit, the report takes note of how gender and
culture, in addition to age, influence the diagnosis, course, and
treatment of mental illness. The chapters also note the changing role
of consumers and families, with attention to informal support services
(i.e., unpaid services), with which many consumers are comfortable and
upon which they depend for information. Persons with mental illness
and, often, their families welcome a proliferating array of support
services—such as self-help programs, family self-help, crisis services,
and advocacy—that help them cope with the isolation, family disruption,
and possible loss of employment and housing that may accompany mental
disorders. Support services can help to dissipate stigma and to guide
patients into formal care as well.
Mental health and
mental illness are dynamic, ever-changing phenomena. At any given
moment, a person’s mental status reflects the sum total of that
individual’s genetic inheritance and life experiences. The brain
interacts with and responds—both in its function and in its very
structure—to multiple influences continuously, across every stage of
life. At different stages, variability in expression of mental health
and mental illness can be very subtle or very pronounced. As an
example, the symptoms of separation anxiety are normal in early
childhood but are signs of distress in later childhood and beyond. It
is all too common for people to appreciate the impact of developmental
processes in children, yet not to extend that conceptual understanding
to older people. In fact, people continue to develop and change
throughout life. Different stages of life are associated with
vulnerability to distinct forms of mental and behavioral disorders but
also with distinctive capacities for mental health.
Even
more than is true for adults, children must be seen in the context of
their social environments—that is, family and peer group, as well as
that of their larger physical and cultural surroundings. Childhood
mental health is expressed in this context, as children proceed along
the arc of development. A great deal of contemporary research focuses
on developmental processes, with the aim of understanding and
predicting the forces that will keep children and adolescents mentally
healthy and maintain them on course to become mentally healthy adults.
Research also focuses on identifying what factors place some at risk
for mental illness and, yet again, what protects some children but not
others despite exposure to the same risk factors. In addition
to studies of normal development and of risk factors, much research
focuses on mental disorders in childhood and adolescence and what can
be done to prevent or treat these conditions and on the design and
operation of service settings best suited to the needs of children.
For
about one in five Americans, adulthood—a time for achieving productive
vocations and for sustaining close relationships at home and in the
community—is interrupted by mental illness. Understanding why and how
mental disorders occur in adulthood, often with no apparent portents of
illness in earlier years, draws heavily on the full panoply of research
conducted under the aegis of the mental health field. In years past,
the onset, or occurrence, of mental illness in the adult years was
attributed principally to observable phenomena—for example, the burden
of stresses associated with career or family, or the inheritance of a
disease viewed to run in a particular family. Such explanations now may
appear naive at best. Contemporary studies of the brain and behavior
are racing to fill in the picture by elucidating specific
neurobiological and genetic mechanisms that are the platform upon which
a person’s life experiences can either strengthen mental health or lead
to mental illness. It now is recognized that factors that influence
brain development prenatally may set the stage for a vulnerability to
illness that may lie dormant throughout childhood and adolescence.
Similarly, no single gene has been found to be responsible for any
specific mental disorder; rather, variations in multiple genes
contribute to a disruption in healthy brain function that, under
certain environmental conditions, results in a mental illness.
Moreover, it is now recognized that socioeconomic factors affect
individuals’ vulnerability to mental illness and mental health
problems. Certain demographic and economic groups are more likely than
others to experience mental health problems and some mental disorders.
Vulnerability alone may not be sufficient to cause a mental disorder;
rather, the causes of most mental disorders lie in some combination of
genetic and environmental factors, which may be biological or
psychosocial.
The fact that many, if not most, people
have experienced mental health problems that mimic or even match some
of the symptoms of a diagnosable mental disorder tends, ironically, to
prompt many people to underestimate the painful, disabling nature of
severe mental illness. In fact, schizophrenia, mood disorders such as
major depression and bipolar illness, and anxiety often are devastating
conditions. Yet relatively few mental illnesses have an unremitting
course marked by the most acute manifestations of illness; rather, for
reasons that are not yet understood, the symptoms associated with
mental illness tend to wax and wane. These patterns pose special
challenges to the implementation of treatment plans and the design of
service systems that are optimally responsive to an individual’s needs
during every phase of illness. As this report concludes, enormous
strides are being made in diagnosis, treatment, and service delivery,
placing the productive and creative possibilities of adulthood within
the reach of persons who are encumbered by mental disorders.
Late
adulthood is when changes in health status may become more noticeable
and the ability to compensate for decrements may become limited. As the
brain ages, a person’s capacity for certain mental tasks tends to
diminish, even as changes in other mental activities prove to be
positive and rewarding. Well into late life, the ability to solve novel
problems can be enhanced through training in cognitive skills and
problem-solving strategies.
The promise of research on
mental health promotion notwithstanding, a substantial minority of
older people are disabled, often severely, by mental disorders
including Alzheimer’s disease, major depression, substance abuse,
anxiety, and other conditions. In the United States today, the highest
rate of suicide—an all-too-common consequence of unrecognized or
inappropriately treated depression—is found in older males. This fact
underscores the urgency of ensuring that health care provider training
properly emphasizes skills required to differentiate accurately the
causes of cognitive, emotional, and behavioral symptoms that may, in
some instances, rise to the level of mental disorders, and in other
instances be expressions of unmet general medical needs.
As
the life expectancy of Americans continues to extend, the sheer
number—although not necessarily the proportion—of persons experiencing
mental disorders of late life will expand, confronting our society with
unprecedented challenges in organizing, financing, and delivering
effective mental health services for this population. An essential part
of the needed societal response will include recognizing and devising
innovative ways of supporting the increasingly more prominent role that
families are assuming in caring for older, mentally impaired and
mentally ill family members.
Chapter 3: Children and Mental Health
- Childhood
is characterized by periods of transition and reorganization, making it
critical to assess the mental health of children and adolescents in the
context of familial, social, and cultural expectations about
age-appropriate thoughts, emotions, and behavior.
- The range of what is considered “normal”
is wide; still, children and adolescents can and do develop mental
disorders that are more severe than the “ups and downs” in the usual
course of development.
- Approximately one in five children and
adolescents experiences the signs and symptoms of a DSM-IV disorder
during the course of a year, but only about 5 percent of all children
experience what professionals term “extreme functional impairment.”
- Mental disorders and mental health
problems appear in families of all social classes and of all
backgrounds. No one is immune. Yet there are children who are at
greatest risk by virtue of a broad array of factors. These include
physical problems; intellectual disabilities (retardation); low birth
weight; family history of mental and addictive disorders;
multigenerational poverty; and caregiver separation or abuse and
neglect.
- Preventive interventions have been shown
to be effective in reducing the impact of risk factors for mental
disorders and improving social and emotional development by providing,
for example, educational programs for young children, parent-education
programs, and nurse home visits.
- A range of efficacious psychosocial and
pharmacologic treatments exists for many mental disorders in children,
including attention-deficit/hyperactitity disorder, depression, and the
disruptive disorders.
- Research is under way to demonstrate the
effectiveness of most treatments for children in actual practice
settings (as opposed to evidence of “efficacy” in controlled research
settings), and significant barriers exist to receipt of treatment.
- Primary care and the schools are major
settings for the potential recognition of mental disorders in children
and adolescents, yet trained staff are limited, as are options for
referral to specialty care.
- The multiple problems associated with
“serious emotional disturbance” in children and adolescents are best
addressed with a “systems” approach in which multiple service sectors
work in an organized, collaborative way. Research on the effectiveness
of systems of care shows positive results for system outcomes and
functional outcomes for children; however, the relationship between
changes at the system level and clinical outcomes is still unclear.
- Families have become essential partners in the delivery of mental health services for children and adolescents.
- Cultural
differences exacerbate the general problems of access to appropriate
mental health services. Culturally appropriate services have been
designed but are not widely available.
Chapter 4: Adults and Mental Health
As
individuals move into adulthood, developmental goals focus on
productivity and intimacy including pursuit of education, work,
leisure, creativity, and personal relationships. Good mental health
enables individuals to cope with adversity while pursuing these goals.
Untreated,
mental disorders can lead to lost productivity, unsuccessful
relationships, and significant distress and dysfunction. Mental illness
in adults can have a significant and continuing effect on children in
their care.
Stressful life events or the manifestation of
mental illness can disrupt the balance adults seek in life and result
in distress and dysfunction. Severe or life-threatening trauma
experienced either in childhood or adulthood can further provoke
emotional and behavioral reactions that jeopardize mental health.
Research
has improved our understanding of mental disorders in the adult stage
of the life cycle. Anxiety, depression, and schizophrenia,
particularly, present special problems in this age group. Anxiety and
depression contribute to the high rates of suicide in this population.
Schizophrenia is the most persistently disabling condition, especially
for young adults, in spite of recovery of function by some individuals
in mid to late life.
Research has contributed to our
ability to recognize, diagnose, and treat each of these conditions
effectively in terms of symptom control and behavior management.
Medication and other therapies can be independent, combined, or
sequenced depending on the individual’s diagnosis and personal
preference.
A new recovery perspective is supported by
evidence on rehabilitation and treatment as well as by the personal
experiences of consumers.
Certain common events of
midlife (e.g., divorce or other stressful life events) create mental
health problems (not necessarily disorders) that may be addressed
through a range of interventions.
Care and treatment in
the real world of practice do not conform to what research determines
is best. For many reasons, at times care is inadequate, but there are
models for improving treatment.
Substance abuse is a
major co-occurring problem for adults with mental disorders. Evidence
supports combined treatment, although there are substantial gaps
between what research recommends and what typically is available in
communities.
Sensitivity to culture, race, gender,
disability, poverty, and the need for consumer involvement are
important considerations for care and treatment.
Barriers
of access exist in the organization and financing of services for
adults. There are specific problems with Medicare, Medicaid, income
supports, housing, and managed care.
Chapter 5: Older Adults and Mental Health
- Important
life tasks remain for individuals as they age. Older individuals
continue to learn and contribute to the society, in spite of
physiologic changes due to aging and increasing health problems.
- Continued intellectual, social, and
physical activity throughout the life cycle are important for the
maintenance of mental health in late life.
- Stressful life events, such as declining
health and/ or the loss of mates, family members, or friends often
increase with age. However, persistent bereavement or serious
depression is not “normal” and should be treated.
- Normal aging is not characterized by
mental or cognitive disorders. Mental or substance use disorders that
present alone or co-occur should be recognized and treated as
illnesses.
- Disability due to mental illness in
individuals over 65 years old will become a major public health problem
in the near future because of demographic changes. In particular,
dementia, depression, and schizophrenia, among other conditions, will
all present special problems in this age group:
- Dementia produces significant
dependency and is a leading contributor to the need for costly
long-term care in the last years of life;
- Depression contributes to the high rates of suicide among males in this population; and
- Schizophrenia continues to be disabling in spite of recovery of function by some individuals in mid to late life.
- There
are effective interventions for most mental disorders experienced by
older persons (for example, depression and anxiety), and many mental
health problems, such as bereavement.
- Older individuals can benefit from the
advances in psychotherapy, medication, and other treatment
interventions for mental disorders enjoyed by younger adults, when
these interventions are modified for age and health status.
- Treating older adults with mental
disorders accrues other benefits to overall health by improving the
interest and ability of individuals to care for themselves and follow
their primary care provider’s directions and advice, particularly about
taking medications.
- Primary care practitioners are a critical
link in identifying and addressing mental disorders in older adults.
Opportunities are missed to improve mental health and general medical
outcomes when mental illness is underrecognized and undertreated in
primary care settings.
- Barriers to access exist in the
organization and financing of services for aging citizens. There are
specific problems with Medicare, Medicaid, nursing homes, and managed
care.
Chapter 6: Organization and Financing of Mental Health Services
In
the United States in the late 20th century, research-based capabilities
to identify, treat, and, in some instances, prevent mental disorders
are outpacing the capacities of the existing service system to deliver
mental health care to all who would benefit from it. Approximately 10
percent of children and adults receive mental health services from
mental health specialists or general medical providers in a given year.
Approximately one in six adults, and one in five children, obtain
mental health services either from health care providers, the clergy,
social service agencies, or schools in a given year.
Chapter
6 discusses the organization and financing of mental health services.
The chapter provides an overview of the current system of mental health
services, describing where people get care and how they use services.
The chapter then presents information on the costs of care and trends
in spending. Only within recent decades, in the face of concerns about
discriminatory policies in mental health financing, have the dynamics
of insurance financing become a significant issue in the mental health
field. In particular, policies that have emphasized cost containment
have ushered in managed care. Intensive research currently is
addressing both positive and adverse effects of managed care on access
and quality, generating information that will guard against untoward
consequences of aggressive cost-containment policies. Inequities in
insurance coverage for mental health and general medical care—the
product of decades of stigma and discrimination—have prompted efforts
to correct them through legislation designed to produce financing
changes and create parity. Parity calls for equality between mental
health and other health coverage.
- Epidemiologic surveys indicate that one in five Americans has a mental disorder in any one year.
- Fifteen
percent of the adult population use some form of mental health service
during the year. Eight percent have a mental disorder; 7 percent have a
mental health problem.
- Twenty-one percent of children ages 9 to 17 receive mental health services in a year.
- The
U.S. mental health service system is complex and connects many sectors
(public–private, specialty–general health, health–social welfare,
housing, criminal justice, and education). As a result, care may become
organizationally fragmented, creating barriers to access. The system is
also financed from many funding streams, adding to the complexity,
given sometimes competing incentives between funding sources.
- In 1996, the direct treatment of mental
disorders, substance abuse, and Alzheimer’s disease cost the Nation $99
billion; direct costs for mental disorders alone totaled $69 billion.
In 1990, indirect costs for mental disorders alone totaled $79 billion.
- Historically, financial barriers to mental
health services have been attributable to a variety of economic forces
and concerns (e.g., market failure, adverse selection, moral hazard,
and public provision). This has accounted for differential resource
allocation rules for financing mental health services.
- “Parity” legislation has been a partial solution to this set of problems.
- Implementing parity has resulted in negligible cost increases where the care has been managed.
- In
recent years, managed care has begun to introduce dramatic changes into
the organization and financing of health and mental health services.
- Trends indicate that in some segments of
the private sector per capita mental health expenditures have declined
much faster than they have for other conditions.
- There is little direct evidence of
problems with quality in well-implemented managed care programs. The
risk for more impaired populations and children remains a serious
concern.
- An array of quality monitoring and
quality improvement mechanisms has been developed, although incentives
for their full implementation have yet to emerge. In addition,
competition on the basis of quality is only beginning in the managed
care industry.
- There is increasing concern about
consumer satisfaction and consumers’ rights. A Consumers Bill of Rights
has been developed and implemented in Federal Employee Health Benefit
Plans, with broader legislation currently pending in the Congress.
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Depression Forums would like to hear from you!
Mental illness affects one in seventeen Americans. However, in this country alone, funding for mental health facilities is dropping drastically and the care for the mentally disabled. When the people who need those facilities have no where to go, they end up overcrowding emergency rooms. Depression Forums would like to hear from you!
We would like to invite you to PM Forum Admin to share your story about your Depression or Mental Health issues as breaking the silence will help us to break open the stigma surrounding mental health that keeps people from getting the care that continues misunderstandings about those affected by mental health disorders.There is nothing better than to speak out, tell your story get the word out! Together, we can help ourselves and others. Your stories would appear right here on DF's Portal. Please PM Forum Admin for more information or to submit your story. Sincerely, The Depression Forums Administration Staff
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