Disaster in Newtown
At the moment I am thinking about mental health services. I
just read an article in Mother Jones magazine about how PTSD can actually be
contagious in a family. Anger and hyper-awareness and nightmares have been
passed on from a returned soldier to his wife and eventually his young
daughter. This is well documented in the magazine and is by no means unique.
I
am jumping ahead a bit chronologically to the horrific disaster in Newtown
Connecticut in which 20 children ages 6 to 7 and four adults were slaughtered
with an automatic rifle wielded by a lone gunman who shot his way into an
elementary school and fired indiscriminately at a first grade class and some
teachers and principal who tried to protect the children. Many of the children
had multiple gunshot wounds. The shooter, of course, committed suicide when the
police arrived and as is so often the case he was described as a shy
misanthropic loner who was protected by his mother (and the mother was the
first victim with six bullet wounds while she was lying in bed). As is so often
the case in this scenario, the shooter was ignored by his classmates and peers,
thought to be shy, and the parent did not seek help for his angst.
We see this over and over with these massacres. A young
person, usually male, who has a history of being "on the outs" with
his society and probably very resentful of the fact, works up a rage about
his life and life in general and wants to strike out at anything and anybody nearby.
Usually the victims are chosen at random and have nothing to do with the
reasons for the shooter's rage. Rage can sometimes be manifested in writings as
in the case of the Unibomber and the Army psychiatrist at Fort Hood.
Mental health services in this country are in a shambles.
There are many reasons for this, but perhaps the most cogent is the attitude of
the general public towards psychiatry and its practitioners. It is often held
that mental illness or psychological problems are a sign of a weak person or a person who is
"weird", and also that the practice of psychiatry in general is laughable and subject
to multiple parodies. Certainly people with serious mental illness such as
schizophrenia or paranoia can indeed act "weird" or even sociopathic,
and the stigma of this kind of behavior is often generalized to anyone with
mental health problems. What's more, from my decades of experience dealing with
psychiatrists, I have come to believe that many are ineffectual and sometimes
even harmful to their patients. On both coasts, I have seen way too many
reputable psychiatrists whose idea of therapy is first to make an official
diagnosis (for insurance purposes) and then prescribe medication and see the
patient infrequently thereafter. One prestigious psychiatrist with a statewide
reputation allegedly responded to a patient's initial request for an
appointment by setting up the initial visit at the electroshock therapy room. I
have known probably three or four psychiatrists who actually perform
psychotherapy and when they do, they are often invaluable. But they are in my
experience (and I realize this is selection bias) fairly uncommon to actually
rare. Psychiatric social workers, in my experience, have a much better record
of actually performing useful and effective therapy, usually using what I have
seen and what many experts recommend as the most effective technique: "CBT
or Cognitive Behavioral Therapy". It's probably more effective than other
more traditional forms of therapy and certainly more so in many cases than
formal psychoanalysis. What's more, it's goal oriented and much less cumbersome
for both therapist and patient.
An equally severe problem is the fact that mental health
therapy is often very poorly reimbursed. Insurance plans, understandably, wish
to reimburse activities for which there are tangible results, such as surgery.
Psychiatry frequently has vague or muddy outcomes and there
has never been, in my opinion, a comprehensive, scientifically sound outcomes-analysis which could be
used by insurance companies for purposes of funding. Therefore, the benefits
are limited in both amount and time and often ridiculously ineffective.
Psychiatry stands near the very bottom of the reimbursement pyramid for medical
treatments as does psychiatric social work. For that reason, some people who would be
very good at the field decide not to enter it. I worked in a drug
rehabilitation facility in California where the needs of addicts extended over
several weeks of therapy, often inpatient, for which the reimbursement was 3 to
4 days per year. As I say, I do not blame the insurance companies as they want
to see results for their money. Nonetheless, because of the stigma involved,
the lack of effective therapists, and the poor reimbursement, good mental
health service in this country is uncommon and too often ineffective. I feel very
strongly that disasters such as the recent school massacre could have been
prevented if this were not the case. But it is. So now what do we do?
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