Many Americans have difficulty recognizing signs of mental illness
Many Americans have trouble recognizing the signs of anxiety and substance abuse, a new national survey on mental-health literacy suggests.
“Our work is designed to help communities think about how to address behavioral health challenges as they emerge, whether that’s drug abuse, anxiety, or other issues, and the challenges such as suicide that can accompany them,” says Mark Skidmore, a Michigan State University professor and coinvestigator on the project.
The national survey examines mental health literacy on four major issues: anxiety, depression, alcohol abuse, and prescription drug abuse.
Skidmore says the web-based survey—which involved nearly 4,600 total participants—aims to give health officials and policymakers a better understanding of where to target education and prevention efforts for major societal issues such as prescription drug abuse. Public health officials are calling the opioid epidemic—which killed more than 33,000 people in 2015—the worst drug crisis in American history.
According to the survey, 32 percent of all respondents were unable to identify the signs of prescription drug abuse (taking higher doses than prescribed, excessive mood swings, changes in sleeping patterns, poor decision-making, and seeking prescriptions from more than one doctor). Those percentages were even more concerning for people aged 18–34 (47 percent) and among all men (44 percent).
Other findings of the survey include that less than half of Americans can recognize anxiety. Most people don’t know what to do about depression even when they spot it, the survey shows. Nearly 8 in 10 don’t recognize prescription drug abuse as a treatable problem.
“Although great strides have been made in the area of mental health literacy in recent decades,” the authors write, “the discrepancies in mental health knowledge, helping behaviors, and stigma show the importance of continuing to educate the public about mental health issues.”
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