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The Truth About Mental Illness: Choices for Healing, by Charles Whitfield

The Truth About Mental Illness: Choices for Healing, by Charles Whitfield



The Truth About Mental Illness: Choices for Healing, by Charles Whitfield

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The Truth About Mental Illness: Choices for Healing, by Charles Whitfield

An invaluable reference book from the premiere authority on, and international bestselling author of, addiction and mental health issues.

Dr. Whitfield provides clinicians, patients and their families with a most crucial guide to mental illness, including information on new treatment options. This unique approach also answers questions on the role unresolved trauma plays in mental illness.

According the National Institutes of Mental Health, one in five American adults suffers from some kind of mental disorder. The Truth About Mental Illness uncovers the myths and realities of disorders such as, post-traumatic stress, ADD, anxiety, eating disorders, drug addiction, schizophrenia and personality disorders. Whitfield offers cutting-edge research into their causes; why the real causes are often overlooked; how clinicians and patients can avoid misdiagnosis and how to prevent dangerous drug interactions. He also offers important non-medicated treatment options, which can be used alone or as an adjunct to prescription treatment.

  • Sales Rank: #1920292 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-04-01
  • Released on: 2004-04-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.58" h x 1.13" w x 5.50" l, 1.44 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 304 pages

About the Author
Charles L. Whitfield, M.D., is a physician, psychotherapist, and internationally recognized expert on mental illness, behavioral problems, and recovery. He has been on the faculty of the Rutgers University Summer Institute of Alcohol and Drug Studies since 1978, and in private practice of medicine and psychotherapy since 1976. Dr. Whitfield has been voted by his peers as one of the Best Doctors in America every year since 1994. He lives in Atlanta, GA.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
1
The Truth About Mental Illness

The truth about mental illness is that it is not as advertised. It is not what some special interest groups tell us. It is not what drug companies and some mental health groups may claim. It is not ­simply a group of genetically transmitted disorders of brain chemistry. It does not reliably respond to psychoactive drugs. And these drugs are not their only available recovery aid.*

*I began to describe these facts in The Truth About Depression, where I focused on the most common mental illness―depression. Because these principles for depression are also true for the most other common mental illnesses, in the first three pages of this introductory chapter I describe the state of the dysfunctional mental health system today using similar wording as in chapter 1 of that first volume. The rest of this chapter is new.

These special interest groups may have misled us.

Their special interest is in large part about money, power and influence in the diagnosis and treatment of common mental health problems. Much of what they tell us about mental illness is actually in their own best interest. It is not always in the interest of the people who experience the pain.

At the top of the list of these groups is the drug industry. While drug companies have produced some effective pharmaceutical agents, such as antibiotics, insulin, and others, they fall short when it comes to mental illness. But to help market and sell their drugs, they have often resorted to making up a limited and still unproven theory about the cause of mental illness. This theory is that most mental illnesses are caused by genetic and other biological defects that are somehow inherent in our makeup. In other words, they claim that we are born with faulty genes and brains―which their chemical will fix. A problem is that after a century of looking for a cause, and since 1960 looking for a 'magic bullet' drug, we still do not know what causes mental illness, and our drug treatments for them do not work very well.

Influenced and often financially supported by the drug industry, and probably for other reasons, health insurance companies, including those who call themselves 'managed care,' some academics, professional organizations, some mental health advocacy groups and government agencies have bought this unproven theory. These groups, which some have called a major part of the 'mental health industry,' have used this limited theory as a basic principle in the diagnosis and treatment of people hurting with what they call 'mental illness.' On the surface they espouse the more accurate and balanced bio-psycho-social theory of mental illness. But they focus primarily on the biological aspects of these disorders and commonly ignore or even neglect the physical, psychological and social traumas in the person's past and current history.

Though it is in their name, managed 'care' companies don't really appear to care. They are a pure business. They are managed money. Some have called them 'managed greed.' Their goal appears to be to make as much money as they can without getting into legal trouble. For starters, just look at the salaries of their CEOs. Forget helping sick people in need. Most do everything they can to delay or disapprove coverage, and not pay clinicians appropriately for their services. Some, such as the nonprofit HMO Kaiser-Permanente, are exceptions to the rule.

In my thirty-eight years as a physician, and the last twenty-six years of that time as a psychotherapist, I have seen and assisted countless patients with a wide variety of mental and physical illnesses. Whether their problem was depression, an anxiety disorder, an addiction, or some other illness, in most of them I have not seen convincing evidence that the cause of their disorders was solely a genetic or another biological defect. (There is also no published proof for the biogenetic theory of mental illness.97, 542, 768) In fact, I regularly saw evidence for another equally, if not more important factor: a history of repeated childhood trauma. Among all of these people, I have rarely seen one who had a major psychological or psychiatric illness who grew up in a healthy family.

Over the past century numerous observers have looked at trauma, and how it affects us. But since 1980 there has been an outpouring of more than 300 clinical scientific studies that have shown a strong link between repeated childhood trauma and the development of subsequent mental illness―often decades later. In most of these investigations the authors have controlled for other potential associations with mental symptoms and disorders (called 'modulating' or 'confounding' variables in the research trade), and they have found them to play a less important role than did the trauma itself. These findings have major implications for the prevention and treatment of mental illness, which I address throughout this and the prior book.


An Exemplary Study


As an example, one of those studies was conducted on a large sample of people living in upstate New York. The resulting information that it gave us is not just psychologically helpful―it is remarkable. Psychologists and researchers Jeffrey Johnson, Patricia Cohen and their colleagues looked at 593 families and their children.532 Their aim was to compare and sort out the effects of parental mental illness versus faulty parenting on the children's subsequent development of mental illness. The faulty or maladaptive parent behaviors included psychological and physical abuse, and neglect, all of which are forms of childhood trauma. They evalu­ated each family member four different times over the long course of eighteen years. At the start of the study the children were on average six years old, and so were about twenty-four years old by its end. At each of these four evaluations, they conducted detailed psychosocial and psychiatric interviews with every ­participant. 

Their results showed that parents with mental disorders had enacted more faulty parenting behaviors than did the parents who had no mental illness. In turn, faulty parenting was associated with a highly significant risk for their children's having a subsequent mental illness as teens or young adults. Indeed, most of the children who received poor parenting, and thus experienced varying degrees of repeated childhood trauma, developed these mental illnesses whether or not their parents had a mental illness. However, the children of parents with no mental illness, but who still had faulty parenting, had the same amount of subsequent mental illness, as shown in Figure 1.1. Parents with a mental disorder had twice as many faulty parenting behaviors than the comparison parents without a mental disorder. This finding could explain a possibly erroneous interpretation from other and less comprehensive research studies that a particular mental illness is genetically transmitted. Thus, as shown in Figure 1.1, the children of mentally ill parents were not at increased risk for having mental disorders unless there was a history of faulty or maladaptive parental behavior (i.e., child abuse or neglect).

The mental disorders that were looked for and found most commonly in both the parents and the children were among the most common disorders, and included: depression, anxiety disorder, substance abuse/chemical dependence, personality disorder and disruptive behavior disorders.* Looking at the lower left corner of Figure 1.1, we can see that the prevalence (i.e., percentage with a mental disorder) of these mental illnesses for the children who had 0 to 1 kinds of childhood trauma was about 20 percent; this was essentially the control or comparison group. But in this study, as the number of faulty parenting behaviors/traumas goes up, so does the prevalence of subsequent mental illness among their children. When there were six or more kinds of trauma present, the prevalence of mental illness increased by a factor of over three times that of the control group.

* The further breakdown of these mental disorders included: alcohol or other drug abuse, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), oppositional defiant disorder, conduct disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, social phobia, obsessive-compulsive disorder, major depression, personality disorders, including antisocial personality disorder, and post-traumatic stress disorder.

These serious and life-threatening psychiatric disorders were clearly more common (by the above factor of at least three times) than they are known to exist in the general population. These numbers (in epidemiology called 'odds ratios' or 'risk factors') each represent multiples of 100 percent, so that a risk factor of 2 means that their chance for having that particular illness was 200 percent greater, or twice as often as people with no repeated childhood trauma (CT). As an example, smoking cigarettes is well known to double a person's risk of having a heart attack. Epidemiologists consider such a doubling of a risk factor ratio to represent a strong or substantial degree of risk, and an odds ratio of 3 to be extremely high. This study of people's lives over 18 years revealed five kinds of mental illness to occur over three times more often for children who had six or more kinds of faulty parenting than for those who had no identified childhood trauma. When compared to most risk factors that both researchers and the public are used to seeing, these figures are impressive.

Don't let these terms and numbers fool you. In the field of epidemiology (the study of illness across populations), these odds ratios, or increases over the control group, do not represent just a slight increase. They are high numbers. Their results are telling us about how dangerous it is not to recognize, treat and prevent repeated childhood trauma. This message is true for people with illness that occurs decades after their experience of the repeated trauma, as I show throughout this book.

The take-home message of this important study is that childhood trauma is significantly associated with subsequent mental illness irrespective of the presence of mental illness in the parents.532 While parental mental illness was associated with the later development of mental illness among their children, none of these associations remained statistically significant after controlling for maladaptive parental behavior. Thus, as others have shown (e.g., Anda et al. 2001), it is the faulty parenting, i.e., the childhood trauma and neglect that accompanies the parent's mental illness, that is most significantly related to the children's mental illness, and not the parents' mental illness itself.

This study gives us another important message: the more traumas to the children, the more likely that there will be later mental illness among them.532 It tells us this by showing a dramatic graded increase of the relationship between the trauma and its effects (Figure 1.1). In the fields of epidemiology and public health, this pattern of such an increasing relationship, also called a 'stair-step' or 'dose-response effect,' is considered to be a significant and important finding. These results show that the more unrecognized, unaddressed, and untreated is childhood trauma, the more will there be subsequent mental illness.

While these results are impressive, if other researchers were unable to replicate this study's results, its findings would be invalidated. But the opposite has happened, as I will show throughout this book. Nearly every study that has examined a potential relationship between repeated childhood and later trauma and mental illness has found it to occur to a statistically significant degree. These investigations have also found a similar trauma-disorder link for depression, which I described in the prior volume.

The truth about mental illness is that the published clinical and basic scientific evidence is strong in showing the link between having a history of repeated childhood trauma and the development of subsequent mental illness. The truth is that psychoactive drugs, legal or illegal, prescribed or not, are not as effective as we would like them to be in ameliorating the symptoms of mental illnesses.

The truth is that the very diagnosis of 'mental illness' may be inaccurate and at times even totally invalid for many people so labeled. And the most important truth is that people with mental illness have several more choices that they can use to heal their pain than to use drugs alone.

In the next chapter I will address some truths about the disorder that many researchers say commonly lies at the core of the link between childhood trauma and mental illness: post-traumatic stress disorder. In the subsequent chapters I will address other common mental disorders. In chapter 19 I review the real link between trauma and physical illness. In chapter 20 I discuss how most psychiatric drugs don't work well. In chapter 21 I review some principles of healing from the pain of trauma-related mental illness, which I continue discussing in the Epilogue.

 

©2008. Charles L. Whitfield. All rights reserved. Reprinted from The Truth About Mental Illness. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the written permission of the publisher. Publisher: Health Communications, Inc., 3201 SW 15th Street, Deerfield Beach, FL 33442

Most helpful customer reviews

20 of 21 people found the following review helpful.
Eye-opening Expose'
By Robynne Moran
I was unable to put this book down; finished it in five sittings. This should be mandatory reading for all teachers, therapists and medical professionals, and students in these fields. While the media, the industry and classroom messages insist we are suffering from biochemically-induced mental illness, Dr. Whitfield has pulled together overwhelming research indicating that it was our childhood traumas that set the stage for anxiety, depression and other disorders that overtake us later in life. Besides the inherent value of knowing the truth, the other benefit of reading this book is that it points the way to truly healing our mental health. Statistically we know that a third of girls and a sixth of boys are sexually molested by age eighteen. Dr. Whitfield explains the psychological and physiological results of that trauma, as well as the trauma resulting from physical and emotional abuse, and neglect.
Collectively, we as adults are at risk of mental health problems stemming from our unacknowledged, untreated and ungrieved childhood trauma. The Truth about Mental Illness proves this, and explains how we can recover. It also explains why we as a society, and as individuals, must stop the cycle of abuse and trauma, in order to avoid handing down the same disorders and illnesses to our children. This is compelling reading that is straightforward and palatable to lay persons such as myself. Hopefully, this will reach a wide audience and create an open dialog about the truth about the human condition. As Dr. Whitfield states that truth is not as advertised!

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful.
Changes our conception of mental illnesses
By A. Giordano
Most of what we've been told for years about mental illness is simply not true. It is not genetic, not the result of brain chemistry, and cannot be fixed through medication.

Continuing in the vein of his prior book "The Truth about Depression," physician and psychotherapist Charles Whitfield chronicles countless studies linking childhood trauma to a host of disorders including generalized anxiety, substance abuse/chemical dependency, eating disorders, dissociative disorders, and schizophrenia. Whitfield unearths overwhelming evidence of the trauma-based roots of most mental illnesses and the physiological as well as emotional/mental implications. Nothing short of shocking and revolutionary in refuting the prevailing "biogenetic model." A must-read for anyone suffering from or interested in these widespread but poorly understood disorders.

The book also raises serious questions about the influence that big pharmacy has on the diagnosis and treatment of these disorders.

9 of 10 people found the following review helpful.
Can you handle the Truth?
By John Kabashinski
This title is on target. This clear and easy read for both lay people and clinicians tells us what the drug industry, organized psychiatry and our government does not want us to know about the most common psychiatric and psychological illnesses. In this book Dr. Whitfield -- from his prior volume The Truth about Depression -- describes in some detail 1) that most of the commonly prescribed psychiatric drugs don't work well and have bothersome and often toxic side effects, 2) that there is strong to overwhelming data based and peer-reviewed published evidence that repeated childhood trauma and later trauma are significantly associated in a causal way with these mental illnesses, and 3) that the genetic theory for their cause is weak at best. Just as for any other product, we can be wise consumers about psychiatric theories, services and drugs that don't work well, which Whitfield gives us as an advanced but readable and practical course in this book.

See all 7 customer reviews...

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