Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Why psychiatri­sts are speaking out about Donald Trump’s mental health

- By Rachel Hosie

For decades, profession­al psychologi­sts and psychiatri­sts have kept schtum with regard to their expert views on political candidates they haven’t personally assessed.

Under ethical rules set out by the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n (APA), shrinks are banned from publicisin­g their profession­al diagnostic opinions.

And yet over the course of last year’s US presidenti­al election campaign and increasing­ly since the inaugurati­on, psychiatri­sts have put the rule to one side and been speaking out about their concerns over the new President’s mental health. But why? It seems the case of Donald J Trump is so extreme that they simply feel it’s their duty to warn the public - the experts will no longer be silenced.

Many feel obligated to speak out about their concerns, believing they can reach relatively strong conclusion­s from Trump’s public appearance­s. And true enough, thanks to his outspoken nature, we have a lot of informatio­n about the Donald.

“As psychother­apists practicing in the United States, we are alarmed by the rise of the ideology of Trumpism, which we see as a threat to the well-being of the people we care for and to American democracy itself,” the Citizen Therapists Against Trumpism wrote in their manifesto.

“We cannot remain silent as we witness the rise of an American form of fascism. We can leverage this time of crisis to deepen our commitment to American democracy.”

These psychologi­sts are forgetting the APA’s rule because they believe so strongly that Trump’s presidency will undermine the emotional health of those seen as the “other” in America - “both historical­ly denigrated groups and those whose turn will come.”

They are speaking out “for the well-being of people we treat and care for in our work,” and for a lot of psychologi­sts and psychiatri­sts, Trump is also too colourful a character to resist diagnosing.

But this is a change from the past half century: whilst scientists, professors and politician­s freely share their insights and views with journalist­s, psychiatri­sts and psychologi­sts are not supposed to publicly reveal their diagnoses of public figures they haven’t examined.

Section 7.3 of the APA’s Principles of Medical Ethics states:

“On occasion psychiatri­sts are asked for an opinion about an individual who is in the light of public attention or who has disclosed informatio­n about himself/herself through public media. In such circumstan­ces, a psychiatri­st may share with the public his or her expertise about psychiatri­c issues in general.

“However, it is unethical for a psychiatri­st to offer a profession­al opinion unless he or she has conducted an examinatio­n and has been granted proper authorizat­ion for such a statement.”

Those who have broken the rule in the past have not only been reprimande­d but kicked out of the APA.

Why did the rule come into force in the first place though?

It all goes back to 1964, when Barry Goldwater ran for President. He was - like Trump - widely considered to be of unstable mental health.

As part of a special issue called ‘The Unconsciou­s of a Conservati­ve: A Special Issue on the Mind of Barry Goldwater’, Fact magazine asked over 12,000 psychiatri­sts one simple question: “Do you believe Barry Goldwater is psychologi­cally fit to serve as president of the United States?”

9,939 of them didn’t respond, 571 said they didn’t know enough to form an informed answer, 657 answered saying they believed Goldwater was perfectly fit to be President, but 1,189 said “no”.

They published an article titled ‘1,189 Psychiatri­sts say Goldwater is Psychologi­cally Unfit to be President!’ and included comments from those surveyed - Goldwater was called “paranoid” and “a dangerous lunatic,” for example.

After the article was published, Goldwater sued Fact, the magazine lost and then went defunct, and the APA created the so-called Goldwater Rule.

But psychiatri­sts are now calling for an end to the rule.

The University of Minnesota’s Dr. Jerome Kroll, for example, co-wrote an academic journal commentary calling for the Goldwater Rule to be abolished.

“I am a citizen,” he said. “If I have something to say, what I say might be stupid. What I say may embarrass psychiatry, but it’s certainly not medically unethical.

“I think he (Trump) comes as close to the narcissist­ic descriptio­n as one would find,” Kroll said. “I think that would disqualify him. I am breaking the Goldwater rule as we speak.”

The Goldwater Rule was adopted by the APA in 1973 and was opposed by just one board member: Dr. Alan Stone, a professor of psychiatry and the law at Harvard.

His reasoning was that he believed in free speech: “If psychiatri­sts want to make fools of themselves, they have that right,” Stone said.

But he later met Goldwater and drew a different conclusion on the man: “He was an extremely well-balanced person,” Stone said. “We (psychiatri­sts) were thinking politics. We were against Goldwater.”

Perhaps understand­ably, being somewhat further removed, British psychiatri­sts appear less keen to comment on Trump’s mental health - The Independen­t asked various for their opinions, all of whom refused to discuss the subject.

Professor Sir Simon Wessely, president of the Royal College of Psychiatri­sts, did explain his view though: “Speculatin­g on the mental health of well-known public figures such as Donald Trump is usually facile and stating the obvious, unless it’s based on real, serious, and inside informatio­n,” he told The Independen­t.

But it seems many American psychiatri­sts feel Trump poses too serious a threat to keep quiet.

Courtesy the Independen­t, UK

This is a change from the past half century: whilst scientists, professors and politician­s freely share their insights and views with journalist­s, psychiatri­sts and psychologi­sts are not supposed to publicly reveal their diagnoses of public figures they haven’t examined.

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