1 In 5 Young Adults Has Personality Disorder

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LINDSEY TANNER | 12/ 1/08 09:06 PM | AP

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CHICAGO — Almost one in five young American adults has a personality disorder that interferes with everyday life, and even more abuse alcohol or drugs, researchers reported Monday in the most extensive study of its kind.

The disorders include problems such as obsessive or compulsive tendencies and anti-social behavior that can sometimes lead to violence. The study also found that fewer than 25 percent of college-aged Americans with mental problems get treatment.

One expert said personality disorders may be overdiagnosed. But others said the results were not surprising since previous, less rigorous evidence has suggested mental problems are common on college campuses and elsewhere.

Experts praised the study's scope _ face-to-face interviews about numerous disorders with more than 5,000 young people ages 19 to 25 _ and said it spotlights a problem college administrators need to address.

Study co-author Dr. Mark Olfson of Columbia University and New York State Psychiatric Institute called the widespread lack of treatment particularly worrisome. He said it should alert not only "students and parents, but also deans and people who run college mental health services about the need to extend access to treatment."

Counting substance abuse, the study found that nearly half of young people surveyed have some sort of psychiatric condition, including students and non-students.

Personality disorders were the second most common problem behind drug or alcohol abuse as a single category. The disorders include obsessive, anti-social and paranoid behaviors that are not mere quirks but actually interfere with ordinary functioning.

The study authors noted that recent tragedies such as fatal shootings at Northern Illinois University and Virginia Tech have raised awareness about the prevalence of mental illness on college campuses.

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They also suggest that this age group might be particularly vulnerable.

"For many, young adulthood is characterized by the pursuit of greater educational opportunities and employment prospects, development of personal relationships, and for some, parenthood," the authors said. These circumstances, they said, can result in stress that triggers the start or recurrence of psychiatric problems.

The study was released Monday in Archives of General Psychiatry. It was based on interviews with 5,092 young adults in 2001 and 2002.

Olfson said it took time to analzye the data, including weighting the results to extrapolate national numbers. But the authors said the results would probably hold true today.

The study was funded with grants from the National Institutes of Health, the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention and the New York Psychiatric Institute.

Dr. Sharon Hirsch, a University of Chicago psychiatrist not involved in the study, praised it for raising awareness about the problem and the high numbers of affected people who don't get help.

Imagine if more than 75 percent of diabetic college students didn't get treatment, Hirsch said. "Just think about what would be happening on our college campuses."

The results highlight the need for mental health services to be housed with other medical services on college campuses, to erase the stigma and make it more likely that people will seek help, she said.

In the study, trained interviewers, but not psychiatrists, questioned participants about symptoms. They used an assessment tool similar to criteria doctors use to diagnose mental illness.

Dr. Jerald Kay, a psychiatry professor at Wright State University and chairman of the American Psychiatric Association's college mental health committee, said the assessment tool is considered valid and more rigorous than self-reports of mental illness. He was not involved in the study.

Personality disorders showed up in similar numbers among both students and non-students, including the most common one, obsessive compulsive personality disorder. About 8 percent of young adults in both groups had this illness, which can include an extreme preoccupation with details, rules, orderliness and perfectionism.

Kay said the prevalence of personality disorders was higher than he would expect and questioned whether the condition might be overdiagnosed.

All good students have a touch of "obsessional" personality that helps them work hard to achieve. But that's different from an obsessional disorder that makes people inflexible and controlling and interferes with their lives, he explained.

Obsessive compulsive personality disorder differs from the better known OCD, or obsessive-compulsive disorder, which features repetitive actions such as hand-washing to avoid germs.

OCD is thought to affect about 2 percent of the general population. The study didn't examine OCD separately but grouped it with all anxiety disorders, seen in about 12 percent of college-aged people in the survey.

The overall rate of other disorders was also pretty similar among college students and non-students.

Substance abuse, including drug addiction, alcoholism and other drinking that interferes with school or work, affected nearly one-third of those in both groups.

Slightly more college students than non-students were problem drinkers _ 20 percent versus 17 percent. And slightly more non-students had drug problems _ nearly 7 percent versus 5 percent.

In both groups, about 8 percent had phobias and 7 percent had depression.

Bipolar disorder was slightly more common in non-students, affecting almost 5 percent versus about 3 percent of students.

___

On the Net:

Archives of General Psychiatry: http://www.archgenpsychiatry.com

CHICAGO — Almost one in five young American adults has a personality disorder that interferes with everyday life, and even more abuse alcohol or drugs, researchers reported Monday in the most ex...
CHICAGO — Almost one in five young American adults has a personality disorder that interferes with everyday life, and even more abuse alcohol or drugs, researchers reported Monday in the most ex...
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These numbers are conservative. I am sure it is more like 50%.

After several years of teaching Freshman Comp at universities in different parts of the country, I found that my greatest difficulty in having students produce papers was to play counselor to them so that they would feel comfortable enough about their (at least for them) overwhelming personal issues to think through the essay writing process.

The problem was understandably greater at the Community College level than the university; nonetheless, it was a huge problem in both.

A simple fact seemed to permeate the troubled students: They felt they were expected to grow up and be responsible before they were 18 years of age.

I did not think this was an outrageous expectation, but most of the students were completely perplexed about it and want a pill to solve the problem. In more cases than not, they were taking Paxil daily.

Did they have personality disorders or were they simply over-medicated to where they may be scarred for life.

These were not private schools.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:15 PM on 12/04/2008

Since when have adjustment problems become abnormal psychiatric diagnoses? Since the modern psychiatric system and the insurance industry determined they could make big money off of labeling people as sick! These college students are probably not abnormal, in fact they sound pretty normal for young adults seeking their way in the world. They may need help with adjustment, however, sadly that should come from the family. Since the family often fails then its up to society. And labeling people as abnormal or mentally ill does not further the cause of society at all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:57 PM on 12/04/2008

As someone with more than 25 years in psychiatry, I find this 'study' questionable. To diagnose a personality disorder there must be a specific pattern of behaviors for a minimun of 5 years. Since many of the 'characteristics' of a personality disorder are seen in two year olds and teenagers, the diagnosis of personality disorder in college age students (who are experiencing more freedom then they have ever had in life) by means of a face-to-face interview without any collaberation from friends and families does not stand up to the rigors of true scientific study or the standard diagnostic criteria of the DSM-IV. By the way, with good parenting most two year olds and teenagers out grow their problematic behavior. The experience of college is part of the growing up process. Eventually a physiological basis for the diagnosis may be found, but for now, the diagnosis is much more based on nurture rather than nature. The best thing the colleges can do is hold the students responsible for their own behavior. Consequences are the best response to most personality disorders.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:36 PM on 12/04/2008

The other portion of my post.... (Thank you for follow-up)
Perhaps something could be instituted such as the following.­.. No Formal Education In This Field -- NFEITF... and then your thoughtful comment, and on the other hand, if you have an education in the field in question, state it! While it may not make you perfect, or even right... theory is, perhaps it does, and others can tend to veiw it more as fact than comment should they choose. I dunno... heck, I'm just a guy... w/3 1/2 years of psych., straight A's, 1 B...... in statistics­.... who's owned 2 versions of the DSM.... and isn't perfect...­. (probably :)... in many ways.... ...but I know for a fact I prefer adulthood to 4th grade.... could we share that here and attempt to learn from the other children? (Mom said: play nice with the other children Puck...) -- Okay, maybe I'm just a big kid, trying to play nice and learn what there is to be learned... wanna play? -- I have to go now my peers... even if I don't come back, please consider my words... Puck, signing off!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:19 PM on 12/04/2008

Excuse me.... Aren't "we" having a discussion about a scientific article? I.e. a 'scientific' debate? This is my first foray on Huffington, and -so far- regarding a debate on the psych profiles of 'our youth', nearly all I'm seeing are cranky, probably well educated adults... acting like children with a temperment 'problem.' Nitsy Nitsy Waa Waa - yer wrong, yeah, well Yer STUPID! kinda... 'talk?' Is this my 'liberal', or at least 'intellectual' bastion??? Or have I simply been zapped back to sitting w/the other "smart" kids in 4th grade? Isn't all of life essentially a learning process? (Hmmm, don't think I'll do 'this' again...') Aren't "we" "grown up?" and therefore have developed a thing called... decorum? (sp?) Granted I haven't read 'every' post, but I think I read between 15 & 20... it degenerate quite quickly my 'peers', quite. ----please see the other portion of my post....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:16 PM on 12/04/2008
- Artos I'm a Fan of Artos 85 fans permalink

Sounds as though a study is called for.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:50 PM on 12/04/2008

Those who have commented here on the greed of the pharmaceutical industry have a point, but have missed the point of the article. This study doesn't conclude with a call for the instant medication of college students, nor would most psychiatric professionals support such a call. Instead, I think that the most important point to be gleaned from this article is that there are insufficient support systems in our colleges and universities for increasingly troubled students. In the past, college was a privilege; now, it has become a requirement for anyone who wants a job in the new service-in­dustry-ori­ented America.

I see students every day who are unprepared for the rigors and pressures of college life, but faculty members, overworked and untrained in mental health issues, are unable to provide them the help that they need. Students whose problems are not yet severe enough to make them a danger to themselves or others are often either ignored or forced to wait for months just to talk to a counselor.

Of course there is a mental health crisis among the young people of this generation, who are the first in decades to expect a lower quality of life than their parents. It shouldn't be a revelation that young people are now under more pressure to succeed, with more obstacles to that success than in the past and fewer institutions able to provide adequate support.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:29 PM on 12/04/2008
- cyrano1 I'm a Fan of cyrano1 114 fans permalink
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I would like more information. We're told of an 'extensive study' by 'researchers', both of which weren't cited. What studies and which researchers?

I personally don't doubt that personality disorders are common among the population, but would like to know how they found their current numbers and what method they used to compare them to our under-diagnosed older population.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 PM on 12/04/2008
- getoffmedz I'm a Fan of getoffmedz 111 fans permalink
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Really silly article.

Besides, one in five is way down from the three out of five spawned by the Eighties.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:53 PM on 12/04/2008

What a truly tragic article. Psychiatry should be exposed for the fraud it is. Over half of the surveyed population showed abnormal conditions? How can that be? If over half of a population has a condition, then doesn't that make it the norm? At any rate, psychiatry is one of the BIGGEST BUSINESSES IN THE USA, and highly suspect. In league with the drug companies, this kind of "survey" insures a steady customer base. For shame. It's about time this is exposed for what it is. The DSM is a political document and not a scientific one. It has little basis in fact and most of it's listed diagnoses cannot be verified. Less than half a century ago, homosexuality was considered by psychiatrists to be a deviant and abnormal condition.

That said, of course people have problems that are frequently helped by other caring people. But we need a new paradigm, a new way of looking at problems as life adjustment problems. There are few psychiatric problems which are brain based. Some behavior problems may be solved by healthy diet and others by having love and acceptance. The psychiatric business has twisted the American way of thinking from one of individuality to one of conform at any cost, including massive does of drugs if necessary.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 PM on 12/04/2008

I bet you're glad you have all your mental faculties.­..You are one of the lucky ones. However, although it may not be in you realm experience, psychiatry and psych issues are real. Please don't be !gnorant of this simply because it is not a part of your experience.

I did not spend 8 years of my life studying a "pseudosci­ence." I put myself at risk EVERYDAY to run out on crisis calls to talk someone down from wanting to hurt themselves or others simply because they are plagued by perception and thought distortion that make them think that suicide is the answer. I see people, daily, who think that God is talking to them, that the governement is implanting computer chips into people, that the Japanese are trying to steal their DNA, etc. All of this is real. Take away Psychiatry, you are essentally taking away treatment.

I have a client that always says, "Just because you can't see my problems, to measure them, doesn't mean that they are not there. When people tell me to control my mood (she's Bipolar), it's like telling a bllind man that he should just put in more effort, then he will be able to see again."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:41 PM on 12/04/2008

Another brave poster who attacks me personally. How gallent. But on to the evidence.
Please reveal the evidence that your favorite diagnosis within the DSM really exists as a verifiable medical condition.

Now, as far as people having problems, of course they do! Absolutely. What we need is a new paradigm, where caring people can help others with adjustment problems.

And since when do you determine that God talking to someone is abnormal? God talks to people all the time, supposedly. Are you saying that sometimes God is a psychiatric condition and sometimes he's not? How do you know?

Anyway, I am in no way putting down the work of caring people who try to help others. I am pointing a finger at the SYSTEM. The system is set up to label people and the insurance companies benefit, the psychiatric profession benefits, and the drug companies benefit. When does the patient benefit? I know someone who has been in therapy for 30 years because her child died. There is NOTHING wrong with her except that she misses her child terribly and has terrible guilt. In the meantime she has been raped by the psychiatric profession, who saw in her $$$$$$$$$$­$$$$$$$$$$­$$.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:19 PM on 12/04/2008

Often those that call psycology or psychiatry a fraud, have mental problems themselves that they don't want to acknowledge.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:00 PM on 12/04/2008

So, your method of refuting an argument is to try to attack me personally? What does that say about you, my dear?

So, you think the range of normal behaviors should be increasingly narrowed? Or do you think that everyone should conform to a set of guidelines created by a bunch of powerful psychiatrists that get together every so often to discuss what criteria they think will be abnormal for the next version of DSM, without ANY scientific evidence.

Please, if you know of any evidence for the DSM, reveal it. I would love to be proved wrong, but unfortunately, neither you nor anyone else has any proof. Medical proof that these
conditions exist. What the psychiatric community is labelling as abnormal behaviors are
variations in human personality that are normal for circumstances.

So, if you can stop with the personal attacks, and bring on real evidence it would be helpful.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:14 PM on 12/04/2008
- fleaba I'm a Fan of fleaba 10 fans permalink

Unless you have actually lived with someone who has a serious mental disorder, I suggest you educate yourself. It is people like you who perpetuate rediculous myths like saying that severe mental illnesses are not "brain" based. WTF...are YOU out of your mind or what?

Thanks to Ronald Reagan's dismantling of the mental health system,this country has treated the mentally ill atrociously by putting them in jails, prisons or leaving them homeless. I have to say that there is now the beginning of hope with the advent of Javiar Amador and others' research into psychosis and insight. There is also movement, however glacial, for new Kendra type laws in many states withing the U.S.

While I think that big pharma price of psychotropic drugs is a sacrilege, I do think its development of medications for the mentally ill has been a godsend for many. If you think that schizophrenia can be cured by just a healthy diet and having love and acceptance, I have a 50 year old brother to send you. The guy is healthy as a horse, loved by his family, exercises like a fiend and is completely schizophrenic. This illness has detonated our entire family. I'd be glad to give someone else a shot at it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:18 PM on 12/04/2008

The percentage of people with real brain disorders is extremely small, right?. We are talking about the plethora of needless diagnoses for unverifiable condtions that abound in the DSM. Now there is psychosis for you, a large group of powerful men who think that these things exist. That or sociopathy. Who could trust a group of people that only a few decades ago branded all gays as deviant and abnormal and mentally ill? Now that group of people I speak of are the ones who actually perpetuate the political document known as the DSM, not the day to day doctor who tries to help his patients and has to use the system as it stands in order to do it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:49 PM on 12/04/2008
- fleaba I'm a Fan of fleaba 10 fans permalink

Cont'd
In case you are wondering, the following is a partial list of what we do need:

1/Treatment centers that work at preventing the psychotic incidents.
That means a "pre-emptive " medicating of those who do not have insight into their illness. The main problem with many severly mentally ill people is that the disease causes them to have no insight into their delusions and current laws require waiting until they severly hurt or kill themselves or others before they can get enforced medication.

2/Serious support for families through the civil, legal and mental health processes. I am not talking about the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill, which as far as I can see is often a self admiration society of those in academia or volunteers who are not equipped to deal with the severe psychotic firestorms inflicted on families in the trenches.


3/Mental health courts and psychiatrists who are well versed in contemporary and recent scientific information (within the past three years).

4/Mandatory hospitilization and medication for the severely mentally ill who are having psychotic episodes and have an established history of serious decline without medication. Asking the severely mentally ill to self monitor their illness and come in for medication, when the illness makes them think they don't have a problem is like something out of Alice in Wonderland­....comple­te and utter lunacy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:18 PM on 12/04/2008
- shedances I'm a Fan of shedances 40 fans permalink
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This study does not bode well for our future leaders ...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:47 PM on 12/04/2008
- dv416 I'm a Fan of dv416 2 fans permalink
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OCD, anxiety, depression, i agree they're all disorders. they're all the result of irrational thinking and an unhealthy balance in the brain.

that said, i think many of these conditions are rooted in low self esteem. to what extent you call low self esteem a disorder is a fair question.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:24 PM on 12/04/2008
- MNmommy I'm a Fan of MNmommy 374 fans permalink
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The sheer volume of !gnorance in this thread is astounding. The study sounds like it was ill-conceived rendering the results meaningless - but the pontificating and lack of understanding about real mental illness in this thread could fill volumes.

The !gnorance perpetuates the stigma. But of course, discrimination against the mentally ill seems to be the last bastion insult in our *progressive* society.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 AM on 12/04/2008
- Babzter I'm a Fan of Babzter 23 fans permalink
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I know all too well what "real" mental illness is - I am bipolar, and believe me, it's real. I'm pretty sure I can tell the difference between real and fabricated mental illness.
I agree with you that discrimination against mental illness is rampant - I carefully considered admitting my illness on this blog, even anonymously.
Today, it seems everyone must have a mental illness to explain their behavior. Some of these behaviors are a normal part of life which resolve with maturity.
Life is tough, stressful, and challenging. If our kids got more exercise and ate right, read a little more and didn't get everything they wanted, maybe they wouldn't be so "stressed".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 AM on 12/04/2008

Thank God! You have hit the nail on the head.

People educate yourself before arguing about this. As a mental health therapist and a sister of an individual with mental illness, I have been insulted on several occasions. Especially, when someone said that adults with mental health disorders should not procreate?!?!? Are you kindding? Who are you to deny a person their rights as a humman being?

Here's the break down: Individuals with mental illnesses have brain structural difference than the norm or chemical imbalances in their brains that cause irregulations with mood or perception.

Individuals with personality d/o, typically develop their personality (affect, behavior, thoughts, feelings, etc.) to cope with childhood trauma. People with these d/o have ususally been abuse, neglected, traumatized, etc. in childhood. They develop personalities to protect themselves. For example, if you told the truth all the time and were hit, wouldn't you learn to lie very quickly? When you lie for your entire childhood and see it doesn't cause you harm, don't you think this would make you lie and manipulate as an adult. We are products of our environoment. Be a good parent and your child will be that 4 in 5...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:38 PM on 12/04/2008
- fleaba I'm a Fan of fleaba 10 fans permalink

You are spot on.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:29 PM on 12/04/2008
- swkidder I'm a Fan of swkidder 8 fans permalink

Guys: Take a breath. I'm sure many of you out there are aware of the entusiasm with which Big Pharma has marketed diseases as vigorously as they market the drugs they claim will help "manage" those "diseases.­" They also pay for a lot of "research" - I use the term loosely.
They discovered this very productive business development strategy when they noticed that ADD left out 50% of the potential "market," i.e. little girls. So they expanded the definition of "attention deficit" to ADHD, and now we drug huge percentages of all our children when we used to simply assume that little boys "wiggled" and "had trouble sitting still." And yes, I am aware that some kids really do have significant issues - just not nearly as many as the number we're drugging.
And then they gave us "situational anxiety" - which we used to call "shyness" and treat with various, very helpful approaches out of behavioral and cognitive psychology. Now shy people take drugs.
And then there's the famous letter written by one drug company to another about a new disease that could be profitably treated (double meaning intentional) with a class of psychoactive drugs. And I quote, "You can't market a drug for that disease. We made it up, and we own it. It's our disease."
Wake up America - don't make any sudden moves. Just put that bottle of pills down, eat a big salad, and go out and get some exercise. You will feel MUCH better.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:01 AM on 12/04/2008

The drug companies walk hand-in-hand with the psychiatrists and insurance companies, slapping abnormal diagnoses on everyone--child and adult--who in previous years were simply part of the bell curve of behaviors, normal and acceptable. Now, normal behavior has been made abnormal and deviant and what is worse labels are stuck on normal human beings which will stick to the child or adult the rest of their lives.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:24 PM on 12/04/2008

Abnormal is fine. However, when a person's behavior is so deviant from the norm that it impacts their functioning in society and their ability to follow the laws of society, this is a problem.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:49 PM on 12/04/2008
- zizyphus I'm a Fan of zizyphus 109 fans permalink
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Since we are exposed to many thousands of synthetic chemicals on a daily basis, it is no wonder that that some effects are being noticed. Our endocrine systems are delicate balances, easily thrown off.

I want to alert people to the fact that synthetic fragrances, be they in expensive perfume, cheap perfume, soap, shampoo, dish soap, whatever, are dangerous to our endocrine systems. Get unscented, or only those using pure essential oils from plants for scent.

In addition, corporate profit driven drug development and psychiatry are over-prescribing drugs to modify our brains. After using anti-depressants for uni-polar depression, people develop bi-polar illness, which is very difficult to treat, requiring several drugs in combination, that must be changed to remain effective.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:46 AM on 12/04/2008
- avocats I'm a Fan of avocats 8 fans permalink

Another study by an interest group telling us to spend more money in their area. Anyone who has known teenagers in the past century knows that they have personality "disorders­." 1 in 5? I'd say more like 3 in 5. And adults, 4 in 5. I agree with the earlier poster who said "whatever happened to "going through a phase?" Exactly. Most of these DSMs are "adjustment disorder of childhood" or "adjustment disorder of adolescence" kinds of things. We used to call them problems. We used to deal with them. I suspect that the number of kids who need serious help is pretty consistent and much, much lower.

And I'm frankly quite tired of hearing about the "stress" of high school, which has been used to justify just about anything of late, including--last week--cheating on tests. "It was just so HARD, Mom! And I need to get into COLLEGE, Mom!" Most of the kids in question are taking watered down courses and not burdened with chores at home much less working weekends and nights. They don't KNOW stress and never will if we continue to treat them like delicate flowers. Sadly, this infatuation with excuses has been going on for several decades and now the workforce is full of whiners--"what, a deadline? I can't work late, I have PLANS! (But I want that 6 figure salary anyway . . . )" and now, "What? No 5 figure bonuses? But you PROMISED!"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 AM on 12/04/2008

Why do you make statements of which you obviously have no knowledge at all? It's difficult to tell if you are being ignorant or just blatantly lying. "Most of these DSM's"? What does that even mean? Do you know what DSM stands for? if you did you'd' know that statment makes no sense. When you say "most of these (DSM's) are adjustment disorders of chidhood or adolesence"" Where do you get those statistics from? Be honest, you made that up because it isn't true. There is a diagnosis called "adjustment disorder" but it's prevalance rate is minimal compared to other mental illnesses such as major depressive disorder or generalized anxiety disorder. That is based on research and fact, as opposed to your statement which you just made up. It is a struggle to respect your opinion when you preface it with blatant falsehoods or completely lack of knowledge on the topic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:26 PM on 12/04/2008

Wow, do you have any psych knowledge? Your comment is nonsense and you appear to lack the proper knowledge to argue this topic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:27 PM on 12/04/2008
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