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Peterson: Shootings a setback for truth in mental illness

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I like to think of myself as a success story for someone with mental illnesses. I’d rather not have them, but then people would rather not have heart disease, strokes or diabetes. But the discrimination over mental illnesses crops up in the most unexpected places. That is the insidious nature of stigma. And it needs to be fought with facts.

The fact that I take medications to help control my mental illnesses should not be an issue. Yet people make it their business. What medications? How many pills? Yes, I have been asked those questions to determine my fitness by people who are not psychiatrists or psychologists. Would they ask the same of someone with diabetes, which can be life-threatening, too?

The public is misinformed about the link between mental illness and violence, according to Mental Health Reporting of the University of Washington School of Social Work. And the link between the two is promoted by the entertainment industry and news media.

“Only about 4 percent of violence in the United States can be attributed to people with mental illness,” Richard A. Friedman, M.D., wrote in Monday’s New York Times. “Alcohol and drug abuse are far more likely to result in violent behavior than mental illness by itself.”

People with mental illnesses are more likely to harm themselves or be harmed by others. For several years running, suicide has been the 10th leading cause of death in the United States. According to preliminary figures for 2011 from the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Vital Statistics System, 38,285 people committed suicide, more than twice the number of homicides.

And the method of choice is firearms. According to the latest figures released a year ago by the National Vital Statistics Report, 18,735 people used firearms in 2009 to commit suicide, accounting for half of all suicides. Suffocation – hanging – accounted for 9,000 deaths.

“A great majority of people who experience a mental illness do not die by suicide,” the University of Washington points out. “Those who die from suicide, more than 90 percent have a diagnosable mental disorder. People who die by suicide are frequently experiencing undiagnosed, undertreated or untreated depression.”

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