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Responding to Charges Made on CBS’ 60 Minutes,
Leading Mental Health Groups Support National Institute of Mental Health
April 23, 2002
CHICAGO - Several of the
nation’s leading mental health groups issued a joint statement today
to protest the reckless characterization of the National Institute of
Mental Health (NIMH) made by Dr. E. Fuller Torrey on CBS News’ 60
Minutes April 21. The groups restated their support for the NIMH.
The American Association of
Suicidology (AAS), the Anxiety Disorders Association of America (ADAA),
the National Depressive and Manic-Depressive Association (National
DMDA), the Obsessive Compulsive Foundation (OCF), and the National
Mental Health Association (NMHA), resoundingly support NIMH’s main
focus: research in brain science to uncover the causes of mental
illnesses.
"National DMDA joins
with professional and advocacy groups in reaffirming our support for the
Institute," said Lydia Lewis, Executive Director of National DMDA.
"This joint statement is a solid indicator of NIMH’s broad
support both in and out of Washington, and among patients and
professionals. The NIMH is on the right track."
"One in five Americans
has a diagnosable mental illness," said Michael M. Faenza,
president of the National Mental Health Association. "NIMH research
translates into practical treatments for a myriad of mental illness and
mental health problems. NIMH helps people."
"As the events of
September 11 have shown, our national government plays a vital role in
all aspects of its citizens' lives and that includes their mental
health. NIMH is instrumental in providing the resources and
support that is needed to get research done for all mental
illnesses," said Patricia Perkins-Doyle, Executive Director of the
Obsessive Compulsive Foundation. "A more balanced look at the work
of the NIMH, unlike the one provided on 60 Minutes, would reveal that it
is focused appropriately on brain diseases and their effect on the
mental health of the nation."
Dr. Torrey stated in his 60
Minutes interview that the NIMH could be closed without any damage to
America’s long term health. To try to make his case, he disparaged
NIMH studies by focusing on those whose titles are easily misconstrued.
Torrey failed to discuss several recent, significant NIMH programs
including the mapping of genetic indicators leading to mental illness,
the Community Treatment of Adolescent Suicide Attempters, the Sequenced
Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression program, the genetic
origins of panic disorder, and the Systematic Treatment Enhancement
Program for Bipolar Disorder. These efforts, to name just a few, reveal
that NIMH is researching all aspects of mental illnesses. They are good
indicators of the Institute’s important work.
The supporting organizations
believe that any mental illnesses that interfere with a patient’s
daily functioning is serious and must be studied. Disparaging or
making light of people suffering with depression, anxiety disorders,
obsessive-compulsive disorder or other mental illnesses makes light of
the devastation that these illnesses can cause on daily functioning,
devastation that can all too often lead to suicide.
"To say that too much
money is being spent on diseases that devastate millions of people
indicates a hasty, attention-getting charge without a reasonable
basis," said Jerilyn Ross, President and CEO of the ADAA. "All
mental illnesses must be studied."
"Suicide is the
eleventh leading cause of death in the U.S. and treatable mental illness
is the leading risk factor for suicide. A spirit of cooperation, not a
spirit of divisiveness, is most productive in seeking solutions to these
life-threatening illnesses," said Alan L. Berman, Ph.D., Executive
Director of American Association of Suicidology. "We need to work
together to find common beneficial solutions while passing up the
temptation to erode the work of others."
"Our group supports the
important work done by the Stanley Foundation, and we recognize its
contributions to the field of mental health," said John Bush,
President of National DMDA and Executive Director of the Texas Society
of Psychiatric Physicians. "However, we know research discoveries
build on each other. To dismiss all the important work of NIMH excludes
the value of their important groundbreaking contribution." Bush
also took strong exception to an assertion by Torrey that all
psychiatrists working in the public sector were less skilled and
dedicated than those working in private settings.
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