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1 in 5 young adults has personality disorder

Mon Dec 1, 2008 4:36 PM EST
health, mental-health, med
Lindsey Tanner, AP Medical Writer
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— Almost one in five young American adults has a personality disorder that interferes with everyday life, and even more abuse alcohol or drugs, researchers reported Monday in the most extensive study of its kind.

The disorders include problems such as obsessive or compulsive tendencies and anti-social behavior that can sometimes lead to violence. The study also found that fewer than 25 percent of college-aged Americans with mental problems get treatment.

One expert said personality disorders may be overdiagnosed. But others said the results were not surprising since previous, less rigorous evidence has suggested mental problems are common on college campuses and elsewhere.

Experts praised the study's scope — face-to-face interviews about numerous disorders with more than 5,000 young people ages 19 to 25 — and said it spotlights a problem college administrators need to address.

Study co-author Dr. Mark Olfson of Columbia University and New York State Psychiatric Institute called the widespread lack of treatment particularly worrisome. He said it should alert not only "students and parents, but also deans and people who run college mental health services about the need to extend access to treatment."

Counting substance abuse, the study found that nearly half of young people surveyed have some sort of psychiatric condition, including students and non-students.

Personality disorders were the second most common problem behind drug or alcohol abuse as a single category. The disorders include obsessive, anti-social and paranoid behaviors that are not mere quirks but actually interfere with ordinary functioning.

The study authors noted that recent tragedies such as fatal shootings at Northern Illinois University and Virginia Tech have raised awareness about the prevalence of mental illness on college campuses.

They also suggest that this age group might be particularly vulnerable.

"For many, young adulthood is characterized by the pursuit of greater educational opportunities and employment prospects, development of personal relationships, and for some, parenthood," the authors said. These circumstances, they said, can result in stress that triggers the start or recurrence of psychiatric problems.

The study was released Monday in Archives of General Psychiatry. It was based on interviews with 5,092 young adults in 2001 and 2002.

Olfson said it took time to analzye the data, including weighting the results to extrapolate national numbers. But the authors said the results would probably hold true today.

The study was funded with grants from the National Institutes of Health, the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention and the New York Psychiatric Institute.

Dr. Sharon Hirsch, a University of Chicago psychiatrist not involved in the study, praised it for raising awareness about the problem and the high numbers of affected people who don't get help.

Imagine if more than 75 percent of diabetic college students didn't get treatment, Hirsch said. "Just think about what would be happening on our college campuses."

The results highlight the need for mental health services to be housed with other medical services on college campuses, to erase the stigma and make it more likely that people will seek help, she said.

In the study, trained interviewers, but not psychiatrists, questioned participants about symptoms. They used an assessment tool similar to criteria doctors use to diagnose mental illness.

Dr. Jerald Kay, a psychiatry professor at Wright State University and chairman of the American Psychiatric Association's college mental health committee, said the assessment tool is considered valid and more rigorous than self-reports of mental illness. He was not involved in the study.

Personality disorders showed up in similar numbers among both students and non-students, including the most common one, obsessive compulsive personality disorder. About 8 percent of young adults in both groups had this illness, which can include an extreme preoccupation with details, rules, orderliness and perfectionism.

Kay said the prevalence of personality disorders was higher than he would expect and questioned whether the condition might be overdiagnosed.

All good students have a touch of "obsessional" personality that helps them work hard to achieve. But that's different from an obsessional disorder that makes people inflexible and controlling and interferes with their lives, he explained.

Obsessive compulsive personality disorder differs from the better known OCD, or obsessive-compulsive disorder, which features repetitive actions such as hand-washing to avoid germs.

OCD is thought to affect about 2 percent of the general population. The study didn't examine OCD separately but grouped it with all anxiety disorders, seen in about 12 percent of college-aged people in the survey.

The overall rate of other disorders was also pretty similar among college students and non-students.

Substance abuse, including drug addiction, alcoholism and other drinking that interferes with school or work, affected nearly one-third of those in both groups.

Slightly more college students than non-students were problem drinkers — 20 percent versus 17 percent. And slightly more non-students had drug problems — nearly 7 percent versus 5 percent.

In both groups, about 8 percent had phobias and 7 percent had depression.

Bipolar disorder was slightly more common in non-students, affecting almost 5 percent versus about 3 percent of students.

___

On the Net:

Archives of General Psychiatry: http://www.archgenpsychiatry.com

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Public Discussion (7)
Stephen snow, PhD, LPC

There is a lot of information missing in this report. do the researchers have any drug company ties? What was the instrument that was used and how were the interviewers trained? What is the reliability/validity of the instrument? The story seems very confused about whether young people have a)personality problems, b) character problems, c) personality disorders or d) character disorders. In one sentence, it is 'disorders' in another it is 'behaviors' or 'tendencies'. Personality disorders have to meet very specific criteria -- even according to the current DSM IV criteria -- to be called 'disorders.' I would need to see a lot mroe before I would consider this a report of serious magnitude.

    Reply#1 - Tue Dec 2, 2008 10:25 AM EST
    ChrisMcK

    Wow.  So a large proportion of college-age students are brooding, drug using, alcoholics.  That's real news.  I would never have thought that.

    We live in the most over-diagnosed, over-prescribed, over-medicated society in history.  Yes, there are those with real issues who need real help.  But 1-in-5?  That's preposterous.  A good way for the phsychiatric care industry to maintain its own existence is to tell us we are all suffering from some mental ailment and need their help. 

      Reply#2 - Tue Dec 2, 2008 11:43 AM EST
      TerN

      I totally agree.  Drug companies just want to sell more meds and the shrinks are there to help them come up with a disorder to go with it.  We have enough stigma in this country.  We don't need more.  Let's do a study of Congress.  I bet that would really be interesting!  We would see that our country is run by a bunch of crooks and sickos (as if we didn't already know that).

        #2.1 - Tue Dec 2, 2008 6:48 PM EST
        Reply
        m-awariDeleted
        Maria-518359

        It does not surprise me. I have been a teacher for over 20 years, and I have seen

        lots of kids who, even in middle school, are using drugs--pot, for one. Some of them

        actually bully other kids to steal their Ritalin. In one upscale community, kids were

        "latchkey" kids with nothing but time on their hands, and there was money around

        so kids could get into stuff. Often, these families were very dysfunctional as well.

        Both parents often worked and there was lots of money.  There were huge homes and

        electronic gadgets, computers, etc. by the barrels, it seemed. This community, by the way

        was a feeder school to the infamous Columbine High School. (I was saddened when that

        happened, but I wasn't surprised entirely. There were lots of kids who were openly hostile

        and angry in that middle school, much of that from coming off drug use and going back and

        forth to it. When that goes on, it does eventually cause mental imbalances, and, indeed, personality disorders.

        I see that there is lots of defensiveness about this study, but I don't think it's "bogus" (a word young people often use) at all.

                I started teaching in the 60's. I left teaching to be a Mom in the early 70's. When I returned to teaching, there were tons of kids doing drugs, drinking, being left alone, and lots of single family homes. That year I taught in Denver, where poverty is abundant, as are

        drugs of all sorts. They existed and people partook of them, including my own son, in Jefferson County. I was devastated. My son got his act together--finally. He's now a construction engineer and self-employed. His wife did heavy duty stuff--cocaine, at an affluent High School in Jefferson County. That was  part of the culture not only in college, but

        also in high school. They decided they wanted to have children, so they stopped doing drugs

        completely. Still, I believe they are still rather immature, and I can see gaps in maturity, particularly in my daughter-in-law. She's very "anal retentive". My son fights depression. By

        now, all I can do is pray and beg for divine intervention.

                    The 60's folks started this garbage, and it hasn't yet stopped. (I was terrified of ever

        using marijuana, so I never went near that stuff as a young woman. I did a lot of partying for several years, but I stopped doing that after I got married. Still, I know that a lot of the

        folks I knew during the 60's in Boulder are dead from dropping acid and moving on to "bigger and better" things.  I'm a grandmother now, and I know that lots of parents look the

        other way and say nothing, or don't even realize their kids are doing drugs. They often think

        their kids are going "through a phase". That's often not the case. I wonder about my daughter also. She's a Ph.D. who won a full ride for her M.A from Penn State and her Ph.D. from Stanford, but I wonder about her. We're not that close, and I've not seen her in four years. I often wonder if she's not doing lots of drinking. Sometimes "gut level instincts" tell a

        mother what's going on. After a certain age, unless one's children acknowledge their "issues", there's not much one can say.

                  Is this criminal? Of course it is. But we in the schools, at home and in our society do nothing. I tried mightily, but by the time my kid was 18, there was nothing I could do except

        stop giving him money. He got cut off from that, and he was furious, but he did grow up! So

        did his wife, but it took them a long time to get off the drugs. They and their peers were all  into getting together and doing pot, booze, and all of that. It's only been in the last two years that that has stopped. One of my son's friends, who my daughter-in-law and he loved

        dearly and thought "the wisest man I know" committed suicide last April. He was in Afghanistan amid the fighting before he went to college, but he also did some heavy-duty drugs. I didn't like him. I thought there was something violent about him. I wasn't wrong, sadly enough. The guy blew his brains out, and I wouldn't call that "wisdom"!

            I tell this story because, as a nation, we need to declare war on drugs in our own homes,

        our schools and our communities. We haven't done so. Now we see the result. Did we lose

        our "moral fiber". I'm a single mom, and I hope my children are okay, but they're not where

        they need to be either. (Their father was an alcoholic who also committed suicide.) I raised them to attend church, go to Mass on Sundays, and I tried to keep things together. My son

        and my daughter have been estranged for 16 years. I'm sure there are lots of stories in this

        country like mine. Few families have escaped this unscathed. America, I love you, but we all

        need to wake up!!!

          Reply#4 - Tue Dec 2, 2008 11:21 PM EST
          katja-759582

          I think the real question is "what is normal?" and if the disordered rate is that high, then it may not be a disorder, just a personality type that 1/5 of people have.

          There really needs to be more specific information about this. As written, it's really inflammatory.

            Reply#5 - Fri Dec 5, 2008 8:11 PM EST
            take2la

            Has anyone ever thought about this-

            those who say others are lacking, deficient, or in-need of, have constant ulterior motive syndrome

            or have set "standards" at an unrealistic level.

            It is nice of them to set the standards for the rest of us though, don't you think?

            It shows they care, doesn't it?

              Reply#6 - Mon Jan 26, 2009 10:54 AM EST
              Mz. Informed-2226836

              Well even tho I'm older I'm pretty much in that demographic as well. Right now I do have bouts of depression and as most of u guys can tell from my post, I'M PRETTY MUCH NOT VERY SOCIAL EITHER.

              The crazy thing is when I was younger, u wouldn't TAKE A PICTURE of me being in the house!!!...I used to LUV to go to parties, SOCIALIZING with ANYBODY....but now I pretty much keep to myself cuz I live in a state full of PSYCHOTIC GHETTO COWBOYS that like to shoot first and the women here are NO MORE SANE as a matter of fact THEY'RE WORSE!! People are pretty much very DECEITFUL, SPITEFUL, and any other "WONDERFUL" words I can use to describe 2010ers.

              Yes life sucks but I'm such a "SLACKER" according to "SYMPATHETIC" people. I should just "SUCK IT UP" and deal with the fact life isn't fair or fun. Thanks a lot. Keep throwin pills my way to "SHUT ME UP".

                Reply#7 - Wed Sep 8, 2010 7:48 PM EDT
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