What causes mental disorders...Brain chemistry? Genetics? or Environment? [View all]
I wouldn't expect a single answer to be adequate for the many disorders; but, how you perceive a problem has implications for how you develop solutions and for how money allocated for research is spent. When it becomes about money it's become a thing that is actually fought over. Anyway, it's an interesting perspective, pointing out potential importance of environment in dysfunction, especially for readers in a nation like the US where the popular belief is "chemical imbalance, and where 'adjustment disorders' resulting from environmental events are taught as temporary, usually dx'd by elimination of 'more serious' disorders, and for which there is no consensus 'best treatment'.
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Mental illness mostly caused by life events not genetics, argue psychologist
Sarah Knapton, Science Editor
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/03/28/mental-illness-mostly-caused-by-life-events-not-genetics-argue-p/
Mental illness is largely caused by social crises such as unemployment or childhood abuse and too much money is spent researching genetic and biological factors, psychologists have warned.
Over the past decade funding bodies like the Medical Research Council(MRC) have spent hundreds of millions on determining the biology of mental illness.
But while there has been some success in uncovering genes which make people more susceptible to various disorders, specialists say that the true causes of depression and anxiety are from life events and environment, and research should be directed towards understanding the everyday triggers.
Peter Kinderman, Professor of Clinical Psychology at the University of Liverpool, told BBC Radio 4sToday programme: Of course every single action, every emotion Ive ever had involves the brain, so to have a piece of scientific research telling us that the brain is involved in responding emotionally to events doesnt really advance our understanding very much.
And yet it detracts from the fact that when unemployment rates go up in a particular locality you get a measurable number of suicides.
It detracts from the idea that trauma in childhood is a very very powerful predictor of serious problems like experiencing psychotic events in adult life, so of course the brain is involved and of course genes are involved, but not very much, and an excessive focus on those issues takes us away from these very important social factors
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