MENTAL HEALTH CRISES?
Every
day, we hear news of yet another reason to get worried about our mental health
and about whether or not we are suffering from a mental illness without realising
it.
Students
are under severe stress at our universities, children are suffering stress from
social media, and, according to the iPaper yesterday, the hoarders among us
have serious reason to start worrying:
‘Perhaps we’ve watched, fascinated and repulsed, at TV shows such as
Britain’s Biggest Hoarders, which feature homes stuffed to the gunwales with,
well, stuff...
‘…This week, it was
classified as a mental disorder by the World Health Organisation, which explained that “accumulation of possessions results in living
spaces becoming cluttered to the point that their use or safety is compromised.
The symptoms result in significant distress or significant impairment in
personal, family, social, educational, occupational or other important areas of
functioning.”
This
is all very well, but takes me back more than 50 years, when writers like RD
Laing and Erving Goffman were writing books that questioned what were then common definitions
of mental health and illness – long before the 1975 film One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest, and my 1978 book Discovering Suicide: Studies in the Social
Organization of Sudden Death.
What
these had in common was that they not only raised serious questions about the
way mental illness and health were defined, but were also critical of
psychiatry and the way they treated and managed patients with the illness.
our
mental health and about whether or not we are suffering from a mental illness
without realising it
Students
are under severe stress at our universities, children are suffering stress from
social media, and, according to the iPaper yesterday, the hoarders among us
have serious reason to start worrying:
‘Perhaps we’ve watched, fascinated and repulsed, at TV shows such as
Britain’s Biggest Hoarders, which feature homes stuffed to the gunwales with,
well, stuff...
‘…This week, it was
classified as a mental disorder by the World Health Organisation, which explained that “accumulation of possessions results in living
spaces becoming cluttered to the point that their use or safety is compromised.
The symptoms result in significant distress or significant impairment in
personal, family, social, educational, occupational or other important areas of
functioning.”
This
is all very well, but takes me back more than 50 years, when writers like RD
Laing and Erving Goffman were writing books that questioned what were then common definitions
of mental health and illness – long before 1975, the film One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest