We Need To Talk About The United States' Mental Health Crisis, Larger Causes: Robert Reich
'We need to talk about the United States mental health crisis and its larger causes,' by Robert Reich, The Guardian, Dec. 11, 2023. - The suicide rate is at its highest since 1941. In addition to a stronger safety net, we must face hard truths about US society.
I want to talk about an uncomfortable topic that needs much more open discussion than its receiving: the United States extraordinarily high level of anxiety. A panel of medical experts has recommended that doctors screen all patients under 65, including children and teenagers, for what the panel calls anxiety disorders. Lori Pbert, a clinical psychologist and professor at the Univ. of Mass. Chan medical school, who serves on the panel, calls mental health disorders a crisis in this country.
A recent New York Times article discussed whats called persistent depressive disorder, or PDD, which an estimated 2% of adults in the United States have experienced in the past year. Nearly 50,000 people in the US lost their lives to suicide last year, according to a new provisional tally from the National Center for Health Statistics. (The agency said the final count would probably be higher.) The suicide rate, now 14.3 deaths per 100,000 Americans, has reached its highest level since 1941, when the US entered the second world war.
Men aged 75 and older had the highest suicide rate last year, at nearly 44 per 100,000 people, double the rate of people aged 15-24. While women have been found to have suicidal thoughts more commonly, men are four times as likely to die by suicide. Suicide rates for Native Americans are almost double the rates for other Americans. (Some good news: suicide rates for children aged 10 to 14 have declined by 18%, and for those between 15 and 24 by 9%, bringing suicide rates in those groups back to pre-pandemic levels.)
Whats going on?
Maybe the widespread anxiety and depression, along with the near record rate of suicide, should not be seen as personal disorders. Maybe they should be seen in many cases as rational responses to a society thats becoming ever more disordered. After all, whos not concerned by the rising costs of housing and the growing insecurity of jobs and incomes? Who (apart from Trump supporters) isnt terrified by Trumps attacks on democracy, and the possibility of another Trump presidency?
Who doesnt worry about mass shootings at their childrens or grandchildrens schools?
Who isnt affected by the climate crisis?...
- Read More, https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/dec/11/united-states-suicide-rates-mental-health-crisis-causes
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- Psychologists Can't Meet Growing Demand for Mental Health Care, NPR, Dec., 2023.
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