In this astonishing and startling book, award-winning science and
history writer Robert Whitaker investigates a medical mystery: Why has
the number of disabled mentally ill in the United States tripled over
the past two decades? Every day, 1,100 adults and children are added to
the government disability rolls because they have become newly disabled
by mental illness, with this epidemic spreading most rapidly among our
nation’s children. What is going on?
Anatomy of an Epidemic challenges
readers to think through that question themselves. First, Whitaker
investigates what is known today about the biological causes of mental
disorders. Do psychiatric medications fix “chemical imbalances” in the
brain, or do they, in fact, create them? Researchers spent
decades studying that question, and by the late 1980s, they had their
answer. Readers will be startled—and dismayed—to discover what was
reported in the scientific journals.
Then comes the scientific
query at the heart of this book: During the past fifty years, when
investigators looked at how psychiatric drugs affected long-term outcomes,
what did they find? Did they discover that the drugs help people stay
well? Function better? Enjoy good physical health? Or did they find that
these medications, for some paradoxical reason, increase the likelihood that people will become chronically ill, less able to function well, more prone to physical illness?
This
is the first book to look at the merits of psychiatric medications
through the prism of long-term results. Are long-term recovery rates
higher for medicated or unmedicated schizophrenia patients? Does taking
an antidepressant decrease or increase the risk that a depressed person
will become disabled by the disorder? Do bipolar patients fare better
today than they did forty years ago, or much worse? When the National
Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) studied the long-term outcomes of
children with ADHD, did they determine that stimulants provide any
benefit?
By the end of this review of the outcomes literature,
readers are certain to have a haunting question of their own: Why have
the results from these long-term studies—all of which point to the same
startling conclusion—been kept from the public?
In this
compelling history, Whitaker also tells the personal stories of children
and adults swept up in this epidemic. Finally, he reports on innovative
programs of psychiatric care in Europe and the United States that are
producing good long-term outcomes. Our nation has been hit by an
epidemic of disabling mental illness, and yet, as Anatomy of an Epidemic reveals, the medical blueprints for curbing that epidemic have already been drawn up.
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