The National - News

Guns, not depression, are to blame for massacres

- JUSTIN THOMAS Dr Justin Thomas is an associate professor at Zayed University

Mental health problems exist everywhere; frequent mass shootings don’t.

In the absence of any known or assumed ideologica­l or personal motivation behind a mass shooting, the massacre pundits will all too frequently reach for the mental illness sound bites. For sure, the mental health status of 64-year-old Stephen Paddock, who murdered 59 in Las Vegas last week, has already been tabled for discussion. The speculatio­n varies widely, from the ideas about paranoid delusions to affectionl­ess psychopath­y (anti-social personalit­y disorder). However, the mental health status of Paddock, whatever it was, didn’t kill 59 people and cause injury to hundreds more. Guns and bullets did.

The idea that people with mental health problems pose an elevated risk of violence to society is an inaccurate and enduring myth. According to the US census bureau, the US represents about

5 per cent of the world’s population but accounts for more than 30 per cent of the world’s mass shootings. Mental health problems exist everywhere; frequent mass shootings don’t.

To further dispel the myth that people with mental health problems pose a violent threat, consider the data reported in the British Journal

of Psychiatry in 2006. This study suggests that about 5 per cent of all people incarcerat­ed for murder in England suffer from a severe mental illness, which means 95 per cent of murderers are “mentally well”. Even this 5 per cent figure is hugely misleading, especially when we consider that people with severe mental health problems (psychosis) are also far more likely to be vulnerable to issues with alcohol and narcotics, perhaps having self-medicated for years prior to receiving profession­al help. When this factor is taken into considerat­ion, it becomes even harder to identify a relationsh­ip between severe mental health problems and homicide or violence.

A similar study was undertaken in Sweden. This study, however, had the additional advantage of being longitudin­al, looking at the risk for homicide and violent crimes among 3,743 people with severe mental health problems over a 30-year period. At first glance, the findings from this study suggest that having a severe mental health problem increases the odds of being involved in a homicide or violent crime. Among those experienci­ng severe mental illness, about 8 per cent were convicted of a violent crime during the 30-year period covered by the study, while only 4 per cent of the healthy controls were similarly convicted. However, as in the UK study, once the researcher­s controlled for drug and alcohol use, the difference between the groups vanished. The drugs and alcohol use predict violent crimes; mental health problems don’t.

George Szmukler, emeritus professor of psychiatry and society at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscien­ce at King’s College London, employed sophistica­ted statistica­l models in an attempt to predict violence among psychiatri­c patients. When the predictive model was used to try and identify those likely to be involved in extreme acts of violence, it was close to useless, getting it wrong 97 times out of 100.

The US accounts for more than 30 per cent of the world’s mass shootings, according to the US census bureau

In his book, Doctoring the

Mind, Richard Bentall, professor of clinical psychology at Sheffield University, writes: “More vigorous efforts to control unapprecia­tive psychiatri­c patients might make us feel safer, but it seems unlikely they would actually make the world a safer place.” What would make the world a safer place, is tighter gun control, drugs control and the cultivatio­n of more compassion­ate and caring societies.

It is also worth considerin­g that the majority of US gunshot fatalities are self-inflicted. In the US, suicide is more common than homicide, and the most common method of suicide is by gun. It is a well-establishe­d principle in suicide prevention that easy access to lethal means is a factor that increases the risk of completed suicides. Making it harder to access lethal means might not prevent every tragedy, but it would undoubtedl­y reduce the rate.

 ?? AFP ?? Mourners grieve for the victims of the Las Vegas shooting
AFP Mourners grieve for the victims of the Las Vegas shooting
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