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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050606/ap_o...NlYwNobA--

Quote:
Mental Illness Can Start in Childhood

By LINDSEY TANNER, AP Medical Writer 2 hours, 41 minutes ago

CHICAGO - Most mental illness hits early in life, with half of all cases starting by age 14, a survey of nearly 10,000 U.S. adults found.

Many cases begin with mild, easy-to-dismiss symptoms such as low-level anxiousness or persistent shyness, but left untreated, they can quickly escalate into severe depression, disabling phobias or clinical anxiety, said Ronald Kessler, a
Harvard Medical School researcher involved in the study.

That so many cases begin in people so young — three-fourths start by age 24 — "is just staggering" and underscores the need for better efforts at early detection and treatment, Kessler said.

"These disorders have really become the chronic disorders of young people in America," said Dr. Thomas Insel, director of the National Institute of Mental Health, which helped fund the research.

The findings, published in the June issue of Archives of General Psychiatry, were based on face-to-face interviews conducted with people ages 18 and older in 2001 through 2003.

The new figures also show that the prevalence of mental illness nationwide has stabilized for the first time since the end of World War II, Kessler said.

About 46 percent of people surveyed said they had experienced a mental illness at some point in their lives, and about 26 percent said they had within the previous year — rates similar to those reported in a 1994 version of the survey. Before the earlier survey, rates had steadily increased since the mid-1940s, Kessler said.

The previous increase was probably at least partly due to better detection and awareness, Kessler said.

The overall prevalence rate is probably an underestimate because the study included only English-speaking adults and excluded rarer illnesses such as schizophrenia and autism.

Most ailments were mild. Only about one-fifth of those who reported any mental disorder within the past year had a serious illness, meaning their daily activities were severely affected.

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On the Net:

Archives: http://www.archgenpsychiatry.com

NIMH: http://www.nimh.nih.gov

"The overall prevalence rate is probably an underestimate because the study included only English-speaking adults and excluded rarer illnesses such as schizophrenia and autism."

They were right not to include autism as it isn't a mental illness. :roll:
Dear Gods - are they only just realising this ??
Maybe if people realized it was more common they would stop being so prejudiced against people who suffer from mental illnesses.

When someone goes into the hospital for cancer or heart attack, people at their workplace send them flowers and cards, their family and friends call or come to visit.  There job is waiting for them when they recover enough to go back.  When someone goes into the hospital for treatment of a mental illness, no sends them flowers or cards, their family avoids them, they lose their friends, their job, and sometimes their home.  When they start feeling better they have nothing.  Was it any less their fault they became ill than a person who has cancer or heart disease?
The stigma is so awful, it seems to have barely moved on since Victorian times for many people.

Wolfy Wrote:
Dear Gods - are they only just realising this ??


I know, that what I was thinking. :?

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