Mental
Illness Exacts Heavy Toll, Beginning in Youth
6/6/05
Researchers supported by the
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) have found
that half of all lifetime cases of mental illness begin
by age 14, and that despite effective treatments, there
are long delays sometimes decades between first
onset of symptoms and when people seek and receive
treatment. The study also reveals that an untreated
mental disorder can lead to a more severe, more
difficult to treat illness, and to the development of
co-occurring mental illnesses.
The landmark study is described
in four papers that document the prevalence and severity
of specific mental disorders. The papers provide
significant new data on the impairment such as days
lost from work caused by specific disorders, including
mood, anxiety, and substance abuse disorders. These
measures will allow researchers to determine the degree
of disability and the economic burden caused by mental
illness, as well as trends over time.
The papers are reported in the
June 6 issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry
by Ronald Kessler, Ph.D., and colleagues. The study was
a collaborative project between Harvard University, the
University of Michigan, and the NIMH Intramural Research
Program.
This study, called the National
Comorbidity Survey Replication (NCS-R), is a household
survey of 9,282 English-speaking respondents, age 18 and
older. It is an expanded replication of the 1990
National Comorbidity Survey, which was the first to
estimate the prevalence of mental disorders (using
modern psychiatric standards) in a nationally
representative sample. The expansion includes detailed
measures that will significantly improve estimates of
the severity and persistence of mental disorders, and
the degree to which they impair individuals and
families, and burden employers and the U.S. economy.
These studies confirm a growing
understanding about the nature of mental illness across
the lifespan, says Thomas Insel, M.D., Director of the
National Institute of Mental Health. There are many
important messages from this study, but perhaps none as
important as the recognition that mental disorders are
the chronic disorders of young people in the U.S.
Prevalence and
Age-of-Onset of Mental Disorders
Unlike most disabling physical diseases, mental illness
begins very early in life. Half of all lifetime cases
begin by age 14; three quarters have begun by age 24.
Thus, mental disorders are really the chronic diseases
of the young. For example, anxiety disorders often begin
in late childhood, mood disorders in late adolescence,
and substance abuse in the early 20s. Unlike heart
disease or most cancers, young people with mental
disorders suffer disability when they are in the prime
of life, when they would normally be the most
productive.
The risk of mental disorders is
substantially lower among people who have matured out of
the high-risk age range. Prevalence increases from the
youngest group (age 18-29) to the next-oldest age group
(age 30-44) and then declines, sometimes substantially,
in the oldest group (age 60 +). Females have higher
rates of mood and anxiety disorders. Males have higher
rates of substance use disorders and impulse disorders.
The survey found that in the
U.S., mental disorders are quite common; 26 percent of
the general population reported that they had symptoms
sufficient for diagnosing a mental disorder during the
past 12 months. However, many of these cases are mild or
will resolve without formal interventions.
It is likely, however, that the
prevalence rates in this paper are underestimated,
because the sample was drawn from listings of households
and did not include homeless and institutionalized
(nursing homes, group homes) populations. In addition,
the study did not assess some rare and clinically
complex psychiatric disorders, such as schizophrenia and
autism, because a household survey is not the most
efficient study design to identify and evaluate those
disorders.
Failure and Delay in
Initial Treatment Contact
The study documents the long delays between the onset of
a mental disorder and the first treatment contact, as
well as the accumulated burden and hazards of untreated
mental disorders.
These pervasive delays in
getting treatment tend to occur for nearly all mental
disorders, though they vary according to specific
diagnostic categories. The median delay across disorders
is nearly a decade; the longest delays are
20-23 years, for social phobia and separation anxiety
disorders. This is possibly due to the relatively early
age of onset and fears of therapy that involve social
interactions.
Shorter delays between onset of
disorder and treatment seeking still a protracted 6-8
years are seen for mood disorders, and are likely
attributable to public awareness campaigns, the
marketing of newer therapies directly to consumers, and
expanded insurance coverage.
While approximately 80 percent
of all people in the U.S. with a mental disorder
eventually seek treatment, there are public health
implications from such long delays in treatment.
Untreated psychiatric disorders can lead to more
frequent and more severe episodes, and are more likely
to become resistant to treatment. In addition,
early-onset mental disorders that are left untreated are
associated with school failure, teenage childbearing,
unstable employment, early marriage, and marital
instability and violence.
The pattern appears to be that
the earlier in life the disorder begins, the slower an
individual is to seek therapy, and the more persistent
the illness, said Dr. Kessler, a professor of health
care policy at Harvard Medical School. Its unfortunate
that those who most need treatment are the least likely
to get it.
Treating cases early could
prevent enormous disability, before the illness becomes
more severe, and before co-occurring mental illnesses
develop, which only become more difficult to treat as
they accumulate, according to the researchers.
Severity and Comorbidity
of Mental Disorders
The second paper reports that even though mental
disorders are widespread throughout the population, the
main burden of illness is concentrated in those with a
severe disorder about 6 percent. A serious disorder
involves a substantial limitation in daily activities or
work disability, or a suicide attempt with serious
lethal intent, or psychosis. The serious group reported
a mean of 88.3 days nearly 3 months of the year when
they were unable to carry out their normal daily
activities.
Unfortunately, say the
researchers, individuals with one mental disorder are at
a high risk for also having a second one (comorbidity).
Nearly half (45 percent) of those with one mental
disorder met criteria for two or more disorders, with
severity strongly related to comorbidity. This finding
supports the suggestion by a growing portion of
researchers that the boundaries between some diagnostic
categories may be less discrete than previously
believed.
Use of Mental Health
Services
The study indicates that the U.S. mental health care
system is not keeping up with the needs of consumers and
that improvements are needed to speed initiation of
treatment as well as enhance the quality and duration of
treatment. For instance, over a 12-month period, 60
percent of those with a mental disorder got no treatment
at all.
The good news is that the
proportion of people who reported 12-month mental health
service use is higher now at 17 percent than a
decade ago in the baseline NCS survey, at 13 percent.
The expansion was mainly in the general medical sector,
with more primary care physicians providing psychiatric
services.
People with mental or substance
abuse disorders were more likely to get treatment from a
primary care physician/nurse or other general medical
doctor (22.8 percent), or from a non-psychiatrist mental
health specialist (16 percent), such as a psychologist,
social worker, or counselor, than from a psychiatrist
(12 percent), though the survey did show that the
adequacy of treatment measured by number of visits
is best when provided by mental health practitioners.
About 9.7 percent sought help from a counselor or
spiritual advisor outside of a mental health setting;
and 6.9 percent used a complementary-alternative source,
such as a chiropractor or self-help group. This held
true even for those with severe mood disorders.
Traditionally underserved groups, such as the elderly,
racial/ethnic minorities and those with low income or
without insurance, had the greatest unmet need for
treatment.
Future and Ongoing
Efforts
The NIMH epidemiological research portfolio contains
several related projects that are focused on mental
disorders among adolescents and ethnic subgroups. These
include 1) an arm of the NCS-R that is studying 10,000
youths; 2) the National Study of African American Life,
with 6,000 participants; and 3) the National Study of
Latino and Asian Americans, with 5,000 participants.
Each of these, like the NCS-R, will provide information
on diagnosis, medications, disability/impairment, and
service use, drawing from nationally based samples.
An international perspective on
these findings is also becoming available, as the study
is part of a global initiative on the epidemiology of
mental disorders in 28 countries, coordinated through
the World Health Organization.
NIMH is part of the National
Institutes of Health (NIH), the Federal Government's
primary agency for biomedical and behavioral research.
NIH is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services.
Source:
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Press
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