THE HAPPINESS OF PEOPLE WITH A MENTAL DISORDER IN MODERN SOCIETY

Similar documents
The happiness of people with a mental disorder in modern society

MOST PEOPLE WITH MENTAL DISORDERS ARE HAPPY A 3-year follow-up in the dutch general population

1.2 CIDI/DSM-IV 21, Alonso 1 Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and Spain

The Impact of Adverse Childhood Experiences on Psychopathology and Suicidal Behaviour in the Northern Ireland Population

Appendix Table 1. Operationalization in the CIDI of criteria for DSM-IV eating disorders and related entities Criteria* Operationalization from CIDI

IDRAAC IN THIS ISSUE. Institute for Development, Research, Advocacy and Applied Care.

WHAT WE KNOW. Ruut Veenhoven

Associations Between Traumatic Events and Suicidal Behavior in South Africa

Epidemiology Self Harm

Problem Gambling and Suicide. Overview. Purpose of the Literature Review. Richard Wallington, BA, BSc, MA and Lindsey Krawchuk, MEd.

Appendix figures and tables

Curriculum Vitae Steven G. Heeringa

The Revised Treatment Manual for the Brief Behavioral Activation Treatment for Depression (BATD-R) Pre - Session

Teaching Job Interview Skills to Psychiatrically Disabled People Using Virtual Interviewers

Perceptions of the Nature of Happiness: Cultural, but Related to the Dynamics of the Human Mind and the Gratification of General Needs

Agenda TOWARDS HOPE AND HEALING: A MENTAL HEALTH AWARENESS EVENT 11/3/2018. Mental Health First Aid. Intro to Mental Health First Aid

Copyright American Psychological Association. Introduction

Current Literature In Clinical Science. Psychopathology and Seizure Threshold

Anxiety Disorders: First aid and when to refer on

University of Groningen. Functional limitations associated with mental disorders Buist-Bouwman, Martine Albertine

Patient Navigation Intervention HIV and Mental Health

WORLD DATABASE OF HAPPINESS 1. Ruut Veenhoven, Erasmus University Rotterdam. Social Indicators, 1995, vol 34, pp

Prevention of anxiety disorders in primary care: A feasibility study

NIH Public Access Author Manuscript Int J Methods Psychiatr Res. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2014 April 30.

ALCOHOL ABUSE AND DEPENDENCE CRITERIA AS PREDICTORS OF A CHRONIC COURSE OF ALCOHOL USE DISORDERS IN THE GENERAL POPULATION

We are IntechOpen, the world s leading publisher of Open Access books Built by scientists, for scientists. International authors and editors

Promoting and protecting mental Health. Supporting policy trough integration of research, current approaches and practice

The Next Steps in the Promotion and Protection of Positive Mental Health Corey L. M. Keyes

The Nature of Mental Disorders. Operational Definition. Conception of Disease 2/5/2013

Journal of Affective Disorders

CONSEQUENCES OF MARIJUANA USE FOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDERS. Master s Thesis. Submitted to: Department of Sociology

UNDERSTANDING BIPOLAR DISORDER Young Adult: Get the Facts

Measuring Psychological Wealth: Your Well-Being Balance Sheet

Understanding Mental Health and Mental Illness. CUSW Health & Safety

A Manual Of Psychological Disorders And Their Symptoms Is Called The

handouts for women 1. Self-test for depression symptoms in pregnancy and postpartum Edinburgh postnatal depression scale (epds) 2

Young carers mental health

Concurrent Disorders. An Introductory Learning Module for Post Secondary Institutions. Concurrent Disorders Training Strategy Project

The epidemiology of anxiety and mood disorders, in

Psychiatric epidemiology and disaster exposure in Australia

Chapter 4. Lessons. Managing Mental and Emotional Health. Managing Mental and Emotional Health

S P O U S A L R ES E M B L A N C E I N PSYCHOPATHOLOGY: A C O M PA R I SO N O F PA R E N T S O F C H I LD R E N W I T H A N D WITHOUT PSYCHOPATHOLOGY

Happiness, Pleasure, and Satisfaction

Overview of Generalized Anxiety Disorder: Epidemiology, Presentation, and Course. Risa B. Weisberg, PhD

Epidemiology of anxiety disorders

Office of Health Equity Advisory Committee Meeting

A Clinical Translation of the Research Article Titled Antisocial Behavioral Syndromes and. Additional Psychiatric Comorbidity in Posttraumatic Stress

Chand, P., Mattoo, S., & Sharan, P. (2004). Quality of life and its correlates in patients with bipolar disorder stabilized on lithium prophylaxis. Ps

University of Groningen

THE UNHAPPINESS OF PROBLEM GAMBLERS

Cluster 1 Common Mental Health Problems (mild)

Pain Management Programme

Mental health and Aboriginal people and communities

Kleptomania- Impulse Control Disorder. Donald Scott. Psy-260-C01 Abnormal Psychology. March 11, Greg Bird. family number

Intro to Concurrent Disorders

Government goals and policy get in the way of our happiness

... Introduction. Method

Approximately 1 out of 15 teenagers get seriously depressed each year.

Behavioral Health Hospital and Emergency Department Health Services Utilization

Everything said today is supported and backed by research

Manami Ochi 1,2, Takeo Fujiwara 1,2*, Rie Mizuki 1, Norito Kawakami 3 and World Mental Health Japan Survey Group

Improving Mental Health Care: A Case Study

INTRODUCTION TO MENTAL HEALTH. PH150 Fall 2013 Carol S. Aneshensel, Ph.D.

Psychiatric disorders, comorbidity, and suicidality in Mexico

M.O.D.E.R.N. Voice-Hearer

Cognitive and social predictors of generalized anxiety disorder symptoms among fresh undergraduates in Uganda

The Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study determined that the

Income s Association with Judgments of Life Versus Feelings

Why do people use drugs? Why do so many people use drugs? What should we do?

Day Programs. Information for patients, carers, family and support persons

Opinion of Primary Care Giver to Psychotherapy Regarding Neurosis Patients

Mental Health Awareness

UNDERSTANDING BIPOLAR DISORDER Caregiver: Get the Facts

EXPERT INTERVIEW Diabetes Distress:

SECOND AUSTRALIAN CHILD AND ADOLESCENT SURVEY OF MENTAL HEALTH AND WELLBEING HIGHLIGHTS

Causality and Statistical Learning

Exposure and Parental Involvement as a Key to Meaningful Progress for Student Anxiety

Health perception of the unemployed

Addressing the Opioid Epidemic: Prescribing Opioids for Non-Cancer Pain

Journey of Personal Development (Part 3): Transcend Yourself. Paul T. P. Wong. Personal development is a process

The Science of Well-Being

Part IV: Who will benefit from preventive care?

A Cross-cultural Analysis of the Structure of Subjective Well-Being

Social phobia and number of social fears, and their association with comorbidity, health-related quality of life and help seeking

A Keystone of Harm Reduction. Matthew Silver, MA, CADC

CHAPTER-5. Family Disorganization & Woman Desertion by Socioeconomic Background

Zone of Positive Stress

APNA 26th Annual Conference Session 1012: November 7, 2012

What is happiness? What is happiness? Hedonia and Eudamonia. What is happiness? Is it true? Brickman and Campbell (1971) 15/11/2010

Dialectical Behaviour Therapy in an Outpatient Drug and Alcohol Setting

Well-Being on Planet Earth

Section 4 - Dealing with Anxious Thinking

The Advocate. Obsessive-compulsive Disorder Post published by National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) Special Interest Articles

TABLE OF CONTENTS. John F. Helliwell, Richard Layard and Jeffrey D. Sachs. John F. Helliwell, Haifang Huang and Shun Wang

Assessment of sexual function by DSFI among the Iranian married individuals

A Blueprint for Exploring International Differences in Well-Being

World Mental Health Surveys: A Global Perspective of the Burdens of Mental Disorders

Step 2 Challenging negative thoughts "Weeding"

CO-DEVELOPMENT OF HAPPINESS RESEARCH Addition to Fifty years after the Social Indicator Movement

THE SOCIOLOGY OF HAPPINESS Topic in Social Indicators Research i

Transcription:

THE HAPPINESS OF PEOPLE WITH A MENTAL DISORDER IN MODERN SOCIETY Ad Bergsma 1 en Ruut Veenhoven 1 Psychology of Wellbeing: Theory, Research and Practice ISSN 2211-1522 1:2, DOI: 10.1186/2211-1522-1-2 ABSTRACT Richard Layard (2005) holds modern society responsible for an epidemic of mental disorder, which he sees as a major source of contemporary unhappiness. Yet average happiness is high in modern society and most people with a mental disorder feel happy most of the time. This appears in an analysis of a representative sample (N = 7,076) of the general population in The Netherlands that was screened for mental disorders. Happiness was measured using a single question on how often respondents had felt happy during the last four weeks. Of the respondents with a mental disorder 68% reported they often felt happy during the last four weeks. People with a mental disorder may be victims of modern society, but they also benefit from modern society. Happiness is highest for people with substance abuse and anxiety disorders and uncommon for people with mood disorders. Keywords: happiness, mental disorder, individualism, modern society 1 INTRODUCTION Mental health is now our biggest social problem - bigger than unemployment and bigger than poverty," said Lord Richard Layard, in the newspaper the Guardian September 12, 2005. Layard is an emeritus professor in economics and a Downing Street advisor in the UK. He was trying to persuade the government to train an army of psychotherapists. In his influential book Happiness: lessons of a new science Layard (2005) marks mental disorder as a major source of unhappiness in modern society. For that reason he pleas for investments in curing and preventing mental disorders. Prevention should not only involve interventions at the individual level, but also social reform. In Layard s view mental disorders are part and parcel of modern market economies. He calls for taming the rat race and reducing the pressures of work, because of the crippling distress involved. Layard is not the only one who holds modern society responsible for what is called the epidemic of mental disorders. An early advocate of this view was Thomas Scheff (1974) and among the current supporters are reputed social scientists such as Lane (2000) and Wilkenson and Marmot (2003). In this commentary two aspects of Layard s claims are scrutinized. Is Layard right that modern market economies are harmful for the happiness of great numbers of people? And: Are metal disorders really associated with unhappiness for all involved? 2 MENTAL DISORDER IS NOT THE SAME AS UNHAPPINESS The epidemic of mental disorders is seen to occur in modern societies. Yet average happiness appears to be quite high in modern western nations. 1 Faculty of Social Sciences, Erasmus University Rotterdam, P.O. Box 1738, 3000 DR Rotterdam, The Netherlands, Phone: + 31 55 3014998, Corresponding Author: bergsma@fsw.eur.nl RV: veenhoven@fsw.eur.nl

Average happiness on scale 0-10 is 7.4 in the USA and no less than 8.4 in Denmark (Veenhoven, 2010a). We now live longer and happier than ever before in human history (Veenhoven, 2010b). How can we reconcile Layard s gloomy statistics with the aforementioned high levels of happiness? Headey and Wearing (1992) show that suffering is not the opposite of happiness. They grouped people on two dimensions that are called well-being and illbeing. It is no surprise that a lot of people score high on well-being and low on ill-being, while a smaller group combines high ill-being with low well-being. Yet, there is also a substantive group that is not distressed, although they lack positive well-being and a group of people who are highly distressed and nevertheless experience high well-being. Aspects of well-being, such as satisfaction with life, positive moods, happiness and meaning in life, appear to be closely linked and seem to have a common genetic basis (Bartels & Boomsma, 2009). The same is true for aspects of ill-being. Depressive symptoms, anxiety and low moods are highly interconnected as well. However the well-being cluster only shows a moderate negative correlation with the ill-being cluster. Emotional experience can be mixed (e.g. Carstensen et al, 2000; Ersner-Hershfield, 2008). The conclusion is that we should be careful to equate mental disorders with the absence of positive well-being. This appears in the results of the Dutch NEMESIS study (Bijl, Van Zessen et al., 1998). A representative sample of 7,076 adults aged 18 to 64 years was interviewed and diagnosed for mental disorders by trained interviewers with the help of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI) developed by the World Health Organization (Robins et al, 1988). They also answered a question on how happy they had been during the last four weeks, with response options ranging from never (1) to continuously (6). As expected, people diagnosed as having a mental disorder reported to have felt happy less often than those without; the average score for people with disorders being 4.1 and for people without disorders 4.9. The average difference is 18% of the scale range (Bergsma, Ten Have et al, in press). Figure 1 shows the distribution of happy moods among people with and without mental disorder. It is apparent that the difference between the two groups is more pronounced on the negative side of the happiness continuum than on the positive side. Of the people who never or rarely felt happy during the past four weeks, 57.7 % suffered from a mental disorder and an additional 26.9 % had a history of a mental disorder (Bergsma, Ten Have et al. in press). We also mention lifetime prevalence because psychopathology is associated with the residual functional disability when a disorder is cured or in remission (Bijl & Ravelli, 2000). Most of the very few people who are very unhappy show signs of psychopathology. Figure 2 provides more detail about the various mental disorders involved. A first point is that people diagnosed as abusing alcohol are as happy as people without any mental disorder. This may be explained by the finding that most people abusing alcohol are young, and alcohol abuse is the only disorder that is not strongly associated with other psychiatric disorders or with functional disabilities (De Graaf et al., 2002). De Graaf et al (p. 311) conclude: Probably we are not dealing here with psychopathology but with behavior specific to a particular phase of early adulthood, in which one sometimes is under the influence of alcohol as a result of a pleasant event. The percentage of people with anxiety disorders that feel at least often happy goes up to 80 if we exclude people with co-morbid mood disorders from our sample (Bergsma, 2009). This figure is hard to align with the crippling distress Layard mentions. This stern judgment should be reserved for people with mood disorders, but even in this category 30% report having felt happy in the last four weeks and for people with an obsessive compulsive disorder (Bergsma, Ten Have et al, in press).

3 WHY ARE PEOPLE WITH MENTAL DISORDERS HAPPY OFTEN? The fact that so many depressed, anxious and addicted people feel happy often is surprising. One possible explanation is that these people were misguided or not honest about their happiness. However, the data do not support this explanation. Happiness of people with and without mental disorders turn out to be associated in the same way with other indicators of wellbeing. People with mental disorders who feel happy most of the time are less absent from work, use health care facilities less often, and use less pain medication than people with mental disorders who feel happy less often. Happy people with mental disorders also function better psychologically, are less neurotic, have better self-esteem, higher energy levels and a more relaxed attitude (Bergsma, Veenhoven et al, online first). This leads to a somewhat paradoxical conclusion that people with mental disorders are happy if they have the characteristics that are usually associated with good mental health. This conclusion goes well with the idea put forward by Horwitz and Wakefield (2006) that the high levels of mental disorders in the general population may be a survey artifact. A lot of people who are diagnosed as having a mental disorder, will have symptoms of mental disorders, but may still be quite able to cope, and consequently feel happy most of the time. Our conclusion is not that the levels of distress that are signaled by the high prevalence rates of mental disorder are not to be taken seriously. It cannot be concluded from our data that happy people with mental disorders are actually flourishing (e.g. Deci & Ryan, 2001), but we do think that the high levels of happiness reported by people with mental disorders are difficult to reconcile with the gloomy image Layard paints of modern market societies. Layard writes about rampant individualism, but research shows people are happier in individualistic society (Veenhoven, 1999) and one of the probable reasons is that individualism enhances the chance that one leads a life that fits one s preferences and capacities. How about the modern time stress? Research shows that people tend to be happier in countries where the pace of life is high (Garhammer, 2002) and one of the reasons seems to be that such societies appeal more to the human need for challenge. The debate whether epidemic of mental disorder is a product of modern market economies is not definitively settled, but Kessler et. al. (2007) found high incidences of mental disorder in non-capitalistic societies. In a large international comparison in 18 high and low income countries Bromet et al. (2011) finds that depression can be explained by personal social circumstances, such as divorce or separation form a partner, and less by macro-economic circumstances. Even if modern society causes part of the burden of mental disorders, its victims may also still enjoy some of the concurrent benefits. Like other citizens, people with mental disorders can count on good health care, freedom of choice and the protection of the constitutional state. Layard is right that modern society has its costs that need to be addressed, but his case about the need for social reform is overstated, because he ignores the happiness for people with mental disorders. Even for people with mental disorders the balance between the positive and negative aspects of modern societies may be favorable. One reason for the prominence of mental disorders in the statistics about unhappiness is that modern society has eliminated a lot of traditional sources of unhappiness, such as hunger, oppression and sexual abstinence. The better the external living conditions in society, the more the remaining differences in happiness depend on inner life ability. As a result, the negative effects of mental disorder will catch the eye more in modern society. It is possible

that modern society also sets higher demands on mental health, because of its greater demands on self-direction. 4 CONCLUSION Layard is right in that mental disorders, and especially the mood disorders, form a huge social problem that should be addressed with priority. Yet the medicine he recommends may be worse than the disease.

FIGURE 1 60 40 20 0 Never Rarely Sometimes Often Usually Continuously People without current mental disorder People with current mental disorder Responses to the question How often did you feel happy in the past four weeks by people with and without mental disorder

FIGURE 2 Percentage of people with a mental disorders that felt happy during the past four weeks.

REFERENCES Ahuvia, A.C. (2002). Individualism/collectivism and cultures of happiness; A Theoretical Conjecture on the Relationship between Consumption, Culture and Subjective Well-Being at the National Level, Journal of Happiness Studies, 3, 23-36. Bartels, M., & Boomsma, D.I. (2009). Born to be happy? The etiology of Subjective Wellbeing. Behavior Genetics, 39(6), 605-615. Bergsma, A. (2009) De meeste mensen met psychische stoornissen zijn gelukkig. Psychologie & Gezondheid, 37, 152-161. Bergsma, A., Ten Have, M., Veenhoven, R. & De Graaf, R. (2011) Most people with mental disorders are happy; A 3-year follow-up in the Dutch general population. The Journal of Positive Psychology, 6, 253-259. Bergsma, A., Veenhoven, R., Ten Have, M. & De Graaf, R. (2010) Do they know what they are talking about; On the value of self-rated happiness of people with a mental disorder. Journal of Happiness Studies. Online first since 31 October 2010. Bijl, R.V., Ravelli, A. & Van Zessen, G. (1998) Prevalence of psychiatric disorder in the general population: results of the Netherlands Mental Health Survey and Incidence Study (NEMESIS). Social Psychiatry Psychiatric Epidemiology, 33: 587-595. Bijl, R.V., Van Zessen, G., Ravelli, A., De Rijk, C. & Langendoen, Y. (1998) The Netherlands Mental Health Survey and Incidence Study (NEMESIS): objectives and design. Social Psychiatry Psychiatric Epidemiology, 33: 581-586. Bijl, R.V. & Ravelli, A. (2000) Current and Residual functional disability associated with psychopathology: findings from the Netherlands Mental Health Survey and Incidence Study (NEMESIS). Psychological Medicine, 30: 657-668. Bromet, E., Andrade, L.H., Hwang, I., Sampson, N.A., Alonso, J., de Girolamo, G., de Graaf, R., Demyttenaere, K., Hu, C., Iwata, N., Karam, A.N., Kaur, J., Kostyuchenko, S. Lepine, J., Levinson, D., Matschinger, H., Medina Mora, M.E., Oakley Browne, M. Posada-Villa, J., Viana, M.C., Williams, D.R., & Kessler, R.C. (2011) Cross-National Epidemiology of DSM-IV Major Depressive Episode. BMC Medicine, 9:90. Carstensen, L. L., Pasupathi, M., Mayr, U., & Nesselroade, J. (2000). Emotional experience in everyday life across the adult life span. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 79, 644 655.

De Graaf R, Bijl RV, Ravelli A, Smit F, Vollebergh WA (2002) Predictors of first incidence of DSM-III-R psychiatric disorders in the general population: findings from the Netherlands Mental Health Survey and Incidence Study. Acta Psychiatr Scand 106:303 313 Ersner-Hershfield, H., Mikels, J. A., Sullivan, S. J., & Carstensen, L. L. (2008). Poignancy: Mixed emotional experience in the face of meaningful endings. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 94(1), 158 167. Garhammer, M. (2002) Pace of life and enjoyment of Life Journal of Happiness Studies 3: 217-256 Headey, B. & Wearing, A.J. (1992) Understanding Happiness, a theory of subjective well-being. Melbourne, Longman Cheshire. Horwitz, A.V. & Wakefield, J.C. (2006) The epidemic in mental illness: clinical fact of survey artefact? Contexts, 5: 19-23. Kessler, R.C., Angermeyer, M., Anthony, J.C., De Graaf, R., Demyttenaere, K., Gasquet, I., De Giralamo, G., Gluzman, S., Gureje, O., Haro, J.M., Kawakami, N., Karam, A., Levinson, D., Medina Mora, M.E., Oakley Brown, M.A., Posada-Villa, J., Stein, D.J., Adley Tsang, C.H., Aguilar-Gaxiola, S., Alonso, J., Lee, S., Heeringa, S., Pennell, B.E., Berglund, P., Gruber, M.J., Petukhova, M., Chatterji, S., Ustün, T.B., (2007) Lifetime prevelance and age-of-onset distributions of mental disorders in the World Health Organization s World Mental health Survey Initiative. World Psychiatry, 6:168-176. Lane, R. (2000) The loss of happiness in market democracies, Yale University Press, USA Layard, R. (2005) Happiness; Lessons from a New Science. New York: The Penguin Press. Robins, L. N., Wing J, Wittchen H-U, et al, (1998) The composite International Diagnostic Interview: an epidemiologic instrument suitable for use in conjunction with different diagnostic systems and in different cultures. Archives of General Psychiatry, 45: 1069-1077. Ryan, R.M., & Deci, E.L. (2001). On happiness and human potentials: A review of research on hedonic and eudaimonic wellbeing. Annual Review of Psychology, 52, 141 166.

Scheff, T. (1974) The labeling theory of mental illness, American Sociological Review, 39: 444-452 Veenhoven, R. (1999). Quality-of-life in individualistic society: A comparison of 43 nations in the early 1990 s, Social Indicators Research, 48, 157 186. Veenhoven, R. & Hagerty, M. (2006) Rising happiness in nations 1946 2004: A Reply to Easterlin. Social Indicators Research, 79: 421-436 Veenhoven, R., (2010) Life is getting better: Societal evolution and fit with human nature. Social Indicators Research 97:105-122 Veenhoven, R. (2010b) World Database of Happiness, Erasmus University Rotterdam. Available at: http://worlddatabaseofhappiness.eur.nl / Wilkenson, R.G. & Marmot, G (2003) Social determinants of health: solid facts, WHO