Posted on 12/08/2001 5:09:02 AM PST by jordan8
Friday, 7 December, 2001
The research suggests for the first time that social factors have a major effect on people from ethnic minority groups with a medical predisposition to mental illness.
The team at the Institute of Psychiatry found the rate of schizophrenia in non-white ethnic minorities was highest in those areas where this group comprised a small proportion of the population and lowest where they made up a large population.
Scientists believe the higher rate of schizophrenia in such groups may be explained by increased exposure to, and reduced protection against, stress and life events.
They point to stress being caused possibly by overt discrimination, institutionalised racism and perceived alienation and isolation.
Reduced protection from the effects of such stresses could be due to decreased social networks or social buffers in small dispersed ethnic minority populations.
The team carried out their research on 15 electoral wards in Camberwell, south London, which has a large Afro-Caribbean and African ethnic minority population.
Professor Robin Murray, who devised the study, said: "Schizophrenia is thought to have a biological component, but what's interesting in this study is that social factors have a huge effect."
Social integration
Incidence of schizophrenia among Afro-Caribbeans and Africans in their own countries was much lower, which could be explained by the existence of greater social support networks in their own countries.
Mr Murray said: "In slightly unfamiliar situations you are more suspicious and it may push people who are a bit paranoid to become psychotic.
"It's social factors at work, rather than something wrong with the brain.
"The black population in the UK has more difficulty integrating and some of the more susceptible people are developing psychosis, where they wouldn't have done elsewhere."
Previous research suggested black people were more likely to be sectioned under the Mental Health Act and were generally over-represented in the mental health system.
Paul Farmer from the National Schizophrenia Fellowship said: "This research indicates the need to look at the relationship between geographical, ethnic and mental health problems.
"This flags up that everyone involved in mental health care needs to be responsive to the needs of local communities, however small they may be.
"If the patient centred reforms within the NHS are to work then the acid test is creating a patient centred mental health service."
The study, which is published in the British Medical Journal, collected data on all people from Camberwell suffering from a psychotic illness during 1988-97.
What a crock of sh!t. Man, I did not know hurt feelings were a national security problem.
My experience has been that blacks coming to the US having grown up in majority-black countries either in Africa or the Carribean are generally better adjusted and more comfortable "in their skin", no pun intended, than black Americans.
Although we have obviously made tremendous progress in racial equality, etc., in the USA, I've often thought that if I were black in America, it might very well drive me crazy. For one thing, the feeling that you could never, not for a day, not for a minute, escape the fact of your blackness. Knowing that when you meet a white person, the first thing he is likely to notice about you is that you are black (I'll admit that I tend to do this).
I say it's enough, among other things, to drive many people crazy, as this article suggests.
The team at the Institute of Psychiatry found the rate of schizophrenia in non-white ethnic minorities was highest in those areas where this group comprised a small proportion of the population and lowest where they made up a large population.
This fact is followed immediately by social theory to explain it:
The research suggests for the first time that social factors have a major effect on people from ethnic minority groups with a medical predisposition to mental illness.
The "researchers" present absolutely no evidence to support that suggestion, or their theory!
Political agendas rear their ugly heads under any circumstances, and biomedical researchers and publications are actually pretty bad on that account.
Or it could be explained that in their own countries eccentric behaviour is more widely accepted.
Or that there are fewer psychiatrists in those countries per capita, leading to fewer diagnosis.
Or that liberal idiots can take raw data and run to the left with it.
PC, M.D.: How Political Correctness is Corrupting MedicineC-Span Booknotes interview with Doctor Satel:
by Sally SatelDrawing on a wealth of information, much of it never before revealed, PC, M.D. documents for the first time what happens when the tenets of political correctness-including victimology, multiculturalism, and the rejection of fixed truths and individual autonomy-are allowed to enter the fortress of medicine. Consider these examples:
1. A professor at the Harvard School of Public Health teaches her students that racial discrimination causes high blood pressure among blacks-an unsubstantiated and dangerous "truth"
2. Nationwide, consumer-survivors preach against involuntary commitment of the severely mentally ill, arguing for their "right" not to be treated
3. Baltimore's Commissioner of Health proposes distributing heroin to addicts, claiming they are too oppressed to help themselves
The consequences of putting politics before health are far-reaching, argues Sally Satel. Patients are the ultimate victims of these disturbing trends. Meanwhile, PC medicine diverts taxpayer money that could be better spent delivering health care, providing proven therapies, and rigorously investigating new ones. PC, M.D. is a powerful wake-up call to the medical profession and to patients. from the publisher's website
". . . it's a very, very pernicious--there are three basic tenets to multicultural counseling. And I must say, this is not done with people who are wildly psychotic. It's done with people who have problems living, difficulty adjusting, minor depression or anxiety.But the three tenets of multicultural therapy are, first, that the thera--that the therapist, the counselor, assumes that the most important aspect of a patient's psychological landscape is her or her membership in an oppressed group--assumes that.
The second is that whatever distress this patient is suffering from is inevitably due to his or her bumping up against racism, sexism or some sort of oppressive force.
And thirdly, that for the patient to get better, he or she will have to engage in some sort of social activism, which only makes sense, of course, if you believe that it's the environment that's--that's largely responsible for your psychic distress, then that's got to be the--that's got to be the thing that--that you seek to change.
Now when you think about it, this is the antithesis of therapy. Therapy should be about self-observation. It should be about taking responsibility for choices. . .
What I talk about in my book is really an effort to--well, the book is--is really an expose of--of what I call political correctness in medicine, the--the idea that disease and even behavioral dysfunction are primarily caused by social injustice and that doctors and especially public health professionals should take on social justice as a mission. I reject that. . .
Full interview HERE
I wonder if the researchers have the guts to look at what goes on in the homes of those schizophrenics - is there abuse, are the biological fathers present, are there multiple "fathers" in and out, is there incest? Previous studies (I'll look for links to these) in late 80's, early 90's looked long and hard at incestuous homes as being key in schizophrenia.
Absolutely, theirs is a cavalier jump to conclusion, when we know statistics never figured in any law.
I agree with your view and admire your attitude. But the fact is that I believe that inside the head of most white people, myself included, when meeting a black person for the first time will hear a voice saying "oh, this is a black person".
It doesn't necessarily mean that there are specific negative connotations that accompany that thought. But the thought is there. I have to assume that most black people are aware of this fact. And, trying to put myselves in their shoes, I think I would find it bothersome. I would want people to simply look at me and see me, see a person, rather than "a black person".
Call me silly, tell me I have problems if you like. I mean no offense; I'm trying to be honest about a sensitive subject. And the fact is that I have thought, over the years, that being black in America might be enough to push me over the brink. That's simply the truth of what I've thought.
My guess would be that the Celts living in Liverpool or Dublin have higher levels of schizophrenia than their ancestors had before the Anglo-Saxons started their mischief with them.
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