Writing about Andreas Lubitz in The New Yorker,
psychotherapist Gary Greenberg asserts that psychiatry could not have prevented
Lubitz from committing suicide and mass murder.
Greenberg is correct to say that it is impossible to predict
accurately what someone who is mentally ill will do, but one comes away from
his article with the impression that he wants to absolve psychiatrists of all
responsibility for their patients' actions.
In Greenberg’s words:
But as
any mental-health professional will tell you (and as many did in the wake of
the crash), nearly one in three Americans meets the criteria for a mental-disorder
diagnosis in any year, and more than half of us will qualify at some point in our
lives. Once diagnosed, people with mental illnesses, even severe psychotic
disorders like schizophrenia, do
not commit violent crimes at higher rates than the rest of the
population. And most people who have had suicidal thoughts do not go on to kill
themselves, let alone a planeload of strangers.
Psychiatry is an imprecise science. Then again, so is
climate science… and some people are convinced that the state of the earth’s
climate a few decades from now is “settled science.”
And yet, mass murderers like James Holmes, Jared Loughner
and Adam Lanza were known to be psychotic and dangerous. It is not that
difficult to tell when someone is stark, raving mad. Anyone who says that it
all depends on self-reporting has not had very much experience with psychosis
or even with severe depression.
We might not know who is going to do what, but we can know
who is severely mentally ill.
One should clarify one point. Today’s psychiatry considers
schizophrenia to be a brain disease. This is not the same as a mental illness.
Unfortunately, it is still seen as such in many quarters.
And the civil liberties lobby has made it very, very difficult to treat
schizophrenics when they do not want to be treated.
Even if it is true that very few schizophrenics commit mass
murder, what harm is done by involuntary commitment. When a patient’s brain
disease makes it impossible for him to make a rational choice about treatment,
the state might well, for his good, impose the proper treatment.
We would also like to know whether Lubitz was correctly
diagnosed? Was he suffering from an everyday mood disorder, or was he more
seriously ill? After all, there are a number of types of depression and one should
not lump them all together.
Or else, we can ask whether he was a psychopath or a
sociopath, both of which are psychiatric categories. Note well that a
psychopath will be especially adept at hiding his condition from those near and
dear to him. A psychotic or someone who is severely depressed will rarely be able to fool very many people.
While everyone is anguishing over the fact that pilots are
disinclined to report their mental illness because it might cost them their
jobs, we also know that Lubitz voluntarily disclosed his mental illness to his
employer in 2009.
When it comes to psychiatric responsibility Greenberg
neglects to mention a point that has been widely reported. Lubitz was
prescribed an anti-anxiety medication,
Lorazapam, that might very well have aggravated his condition.
The Daily Mail reports:
It also emerged that the 27-year-old was prescribed an
anti-anxiety drug so strong doctors have to warn patients of the increased risk
of suicide. People who use Lorazapam are advised not to drive a car, let alone
fly a commercial jetliner.
Medical experts say it can also increase the risk of
self-harm at the start of treatment.
Also, from the time of his pilot training in Phoenix Lubitz was flagged as being unfit to fly. Surely, Lufthanza could have made psychiatric treatment a condition of employment. Or better, it could have rejected him as a pilot.
In America, Jesse Singal reports, the Americans with
Disabilities Act forbids an employer from firing anyone because that individual
is mentally ill. Of course, there are exceptions.
Singal explains:
In general, the Americans With Disabilities Act protects
employees at big companies from being fired because of mental illness. There
are many exceptions, though, as laid out in this
primer from the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI). Businesses can terminate an employee whose
illness would cause an “undue hardship” to the business in question, or if there’s
a credible reason to think the individual could pose a threat to themselves or
others.
One suspects that someone, somewhere either underestimated
the extent of Lubitz’s illness or overestimated the ability of psychiatry to
cure him. Surely, the psychiatrist who prescribed Lorazapam to an airline pilot
ought to have to answer for his decision.
What can psychiatry tell us about Andreas Lubitz? Greenberg
suggests that mental health professionals can concoct narratives that appear to
explain what went wrong.
He writes:
Our
experience and our theories don’t allow us to predict who the next Andreas
Lubitz will be, but they do give us the ability to assemble the fragments of
his life into a coherent narrative that ends in an explosion in the Alps. We
can, in other words, retrodict, and if we are good at it—if we can find a story
that incorporates the events and fits their magnitude—we can bring the
consolations of narrative to otherwise inexplicable occurrences. Nothing that
we come up with is likely to prevent the next disaster, but it will at least
provide an explanation, and with it some respite from the discovery, which we
make again and again, that life can turn on a dime, and that when it does it is
often for no reason at all, or for reasons that cannot be grasped.
When I described psychoanalysis as “overpriced storytelling”
I was not fully aware of how much this unfortunate habit had invaded other
forms of psychotherapy.
Surely, it is true that you can concoct a story that seems
to explain almost anything. You can cobble together a narrative that appears to
explain cancer, heart disease, automobile accidents, neurological disorders…
what have you.
The narratives, Greenberg suggests, provide something of a
consolation. They do not tell you what happened or how it happened. They do not
offer a path to treatment.
Their primary purpose is to comfort those who are confused
by a seemingly inexplicable event and to burnish the authority of
psychiatrists.
If therapists cannot treat or cure, at least they can
explain it away. But, they are also explaining their own failure to cure a man
who was manifestly ill.
Since psychiatrists in Phoenix had seen that Lubitz was unfit to fly, the notion that no psychiatrist anywhere could have prevented him from doing what he did makes no sense. And that's without saying anything about the psychiatrist who gave him Lorazapam.
Looks like Jews will mostly stick with Dems.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.vdare.com/articles/sorry-jonah-jewishdemocrat-alliance-not-ending-anytime-soon?stf=find%20nothing%20incompatible
"Or else, we can ask whether he was a psychopath or a sociopath, both of which are psychiatric categories. Note well that a psychopath will be especially adept at hiding his condition from those near and dear to him. A psychotic or someone who is severely depressed will rarely be able to fool very many people."
ReplyDeleteI thought that psychopathic tendencies showed up on brain scans, too.
Schizophrenics are also quite capable of functioning with active hallucinations, so I'm not sure quite what you are trying to say here.
I was trying to point out that psychopaths and sociopaths are notoriously good liars and are notoriously good at appearing to be perfectly normal.
ReplyDeleteI was also noting that Loughner, Holmes and Lanza were notably psychotic. It did not take any special training to see it. And, those who had special training were very clear about the diagnosis--the problem was that there was nothing they could do to help without consent.