Readers of this blog know that I have long suggested that we
would do well to commit dangerous schizophrenics involuntarily. This means, we
should be able to provide psychiatric treatment to severely ill patients, even
if they refuse it.
Intuitively, it feels easier to institutionalize a few
dangerous psychotics than to remove nearly 300,000,000 guns from the hands of American
citizens.
Other problems exist. Beyond the civil liberties concerns,
Dr. E. Fuller Torrey points out that even if we decide on more lax standards
for involuntary commitment, we do not have enough psychiatric beds to treat all
the patients. After all, we, as a nation decided on a policy of deinstitutionalization
several decades ago. We are now, as the Bible says, reaping the whirlwind.
For my part, I would like to know how many other civilized
nations allow schizophrenics to wander around at will. How many nations refuse
to treat psychotics until they commit a horrific act of violence, against
themselves and others. Even if these patients do not commit violent actions, do we have a moral responsibility to offer them treatment when they are incapable of deciding what is best for themselves.
This morning Dr. Richard Friedman offered a cogent argument
against involuntary commitment in The New York Times.
It is worth examining in detail.
Friedman explains:
While
it is true that most mass killers have a psychiatric illness, the vast majority
of violent people are not mentally ill and most mentally ill people are not
violent. Indeed, only about 4 percent of overall violence in the United States
can be attributed to those with mental illness. Most homicides in the United
States are committed by people without mental illness who use guns.
These are good points. And yet, the issue is not gun
violence, but the treatment of psychosis. Besides, psychosis is not an
ordinary mental illness. Research suggests that it is a brain disease.
No one is suggesting that all people who suffer from mental
illness—the latest version of the DSM defines so many varieties that just about
everyone qualifies—should be subjected to involuntary hospitalization.
While it is true that most homicides are committed by people
who are not mentally ill, the fact that we cannot stop all of the violence does
not mean that we should not stop some of it.
One must note that most gun homicides are committed by gang
members in large American cities. How many of these cities have strict gun
control laws? Anyone who believes that stricter gun control will solve anything
should explain how well it’s working in New York, Chicago, Philadelphia and
Washington, DC.
Then, Dr. Friedman suggests that the link between violence
and major mental illness is real:
Large
epidemiologic studies show that psychiatric illness is a risk factor for
violent behavior, but the risk is small and linked only to a few serious mental
disorders. People with schizophrenia, major depression or bipolar disorder were
two to three times as likely as those without these disorders to be violent.
The actual lifetime prevalence of violence among people with serious mental
illness is about 16 percent compared with 7 percent among people who are not
mentally ill.
Again, the issue is not so much who will or will not commit
violent acts, though those who suffer from severe mental illness are far more
likely to do so. The issue is whether it is good or bad policy to treat
schizophrenics against their will.
If we are talking only about violence, Dr. Friedman notes,
people suffering from drug or alcohol addiction are very likely to commit
violent acts:
What
most people don’t know is that drug and alcohol abuse are far more powerful
risk factors for violence than other psychiatric illnesses. Individuals who
abuse drugs or alcohol but have no other psychiatric disorder are almost seven
times more likely than those without substance abuse to act violently.
It is worth asking how many of these addicts are
self-medicating, that is, treating a severe psychiatric illness with their own
kind of medication.
He continues:
Would
lowering the threshold for involuntary psychiatric treatment, as some argue, be
effective in preventing mass killings or homicide in general? It’s doubtful.
The
current guideline for psychiatric treatment over the objection of the patient
is, in most states, imminent risk of harm to self or others. Short of issuing a
direct threat of violence or appearing grossly disturbed, you will not receive
involuntary treatment. When Mr. Rodger was interviewed by the police after his
mother expressed alarm about videos he had posted, several weeks ago, he
appeared calm and in control and was thus not apprehended. In other words, a
normal-appearing killer who is quietly planning a massacre can easily evade
detection.
It is surely possible to evade detection in a single
interview, but people who spent time with Elliot Rodger and Adam Lanza knew
perfectly well that they looked crazy.
Dr. Torrey offers a different take on the issue:
Many
individuals who are psychiatrically disturbed are able to “hang it together”
for a few minutes when confronted by a police officer, judge, etc. I have had
very psychotic patients appear quite rational for 10 minutes in a courtroom by
focusing their mind. Patients with Parkinson’s disease can similarly suppress
their tremor briefly by focusing their mind on it. Thus, it is unrealistic to
expect a police officer to make a clinical evaluation, and such evaluations
should include a mental health professional.
Here, Dr. Torrey raises the issue of the competence of
mental health professionals. If no psychiatrist understood how ill Adam Lanza was,
that can mean that he hid his illness very well or else that the psychiatrists
were not doing a very good job.
Keep in mind, Elliot Rodger availed himself fully of the
resources provided by the mental health system. He saw multiple therapists for
many, many years.
Ought we not to question their competence and the
effectiveness of the treatments they were offering.
Finally, Dr. Friedman explains that if we made it easier to
commit patients involuntarily, other patients might be discouraged from
availing themselves of treatment.
In his words:
In the
wake of these horrific killings, it would be understandable if the public
wanted to make it easier to force treatment on patients before a threat is
issued. But that might simply discourage other mentally ill people from being
candid and drive some of the sickest patients away from the mental health care
system.
The point might have some validity in some cases. And yet,
the notion of involuntary commitment assumes that the sickest patients systematically
refuse all dealings with the mental health system.
We cannot, Dr. Friedman correctly notes, predict violent
behavior, but we can see when someone is severely ill and incapable of making a
rational decision about care.
He writes:
We have
always had — and always will have — Adam Lanzas and Elliot Rodgers. The
sobering fact is that there is little we can do to predict or change human
behavior, particularly violence; it is a lot easier to control its expression,
and to limit deadly means of self-expression. In every state, we should prevent
individuals with a known history of serious psychiatric illness or substance
abuse, both of which predict increased risk of violence, from owning or
purchasing guns.
Let’s imagine that states do not hand out gun permits to
people who suffer severe psychiatric illness. If a schizophrenic wants to
commit gun violence would he not be likely to avoid mental health treatment. If
he cannot be committed involuntarily, how are the authorities to know about his
illness?
As for substance abuse, how can state employees know whether
someone is an addict without, for example, some kind of test? And, what about people
who are abusing medication that has been duly prescribed by a physician? Aren’t
more and more people are becoming addicted to prescription painkillers?
Of course, the campaign for gun control will have no effect
on those who, like Rodger kill with knives, or on those who, like Lanza use
someone else’s guns.
2 comments:
I am going to come back in a bit and read this article very carefully because it is a topic that has interested me for a long time.
But in the first scan-through I did not see mention of what I think may be the overlooked aspect that has the greatest interest for the world at large.
And the missing aspect is missing from all modern incarceration systems.
That aspect is that "society" (what ever that turns out to mean) in paying for prisons and asylums should demand as the first product the protection from the activities of the incarcerated.
"Treatment", "rehabilitation" and all of that should be tertiary after "protect society from the actions of the incarcerated" and protect the incarcerated from the actions of the incarcerated".
Here's another interesting perspective, apparently Elliot's dad gave him a copy of the new agey book "The Secret" and its Law of Attraction.
http://theweek.com/article/index/262310
"Once I finished reading it, I drove all the way to Point Dume in Malibu and climbed out to the cliffs at the very edge. It was a windy day, and I could see the ocean roiling below me. As night fell, I looked out to the stars and proclaimed to the universe everything I wanted in life. I proclaimed how I wanted to be a millionaire, so I could live a luxurious life and finally be able to attract the beautiful girls I covet so much."
Whatever else this shows, I mean this is the "new American dream", more credible than snake oil salesmen, that promises healing to your suffering just by believing the right things, and being receptive to the gifts of the universe.
My dad talked about this new age philosophy, and his example was that his car was getting old and he wanted to get a newer used car, so he created an image of what he wanted in his mind, and a price he could afford, and felt the urge to drive around, and within 15 minutes saw the exact car he wanted parked on the street with a for sale sign in the price range he wanted, and he bought it the next day after getting it inspected.
So I can like success stories like that, and see when we're self-absorbed we miss what's around us, and so by asking (the universe) for what you want, with a faith that its there, it makes you pay attention and see what you'd otherwise miss.
And given Elliot's rather egotistical goals, perhaps he wasn't "open" enough, and perhaps there were a half dozen girls in his past that liked him, and they were invisible to him because they didn't fit his mind's image of what a girlfriend should look like?
Anyway, I don't think there's anything in "The Secret" that suggests revenge will get you what you want, so the Law of Attraction supports can feel smug that their book was at best abused by a confused young man who was too focused on status of a false self or whatever.
I don't know. I like the creative approach to life, but don't know what to do when people get stuck in self-pity and resentment. Its easy to give advice than to imagine what its like inside, or offer constructive ways out.
I'm not convinced any amount of hospitalization would help people, but I admit it would keep the rest of us safer.
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