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Psychiatric Times.
 

Mass Murder and Psychiatry

By H. Steven Moffic, MD | December 17, 2012

Tragedy in NewtownThere has been increasing publicity about the imminent end of the world on December 21, 2012, as possibly posited in the Mayan Calendar. What we do know for sure, is that for all the young children and adults who were killed in Newtown, Connecticut, their world ended a week earlier, on December 14th.

As the play of the same name by Thornton Wilder, Newtown Is Our Town.

(MORE: Will 2013 Be a Lucky Year for Psychiatry?)

The perpetrator must be, in some way, everyman. We must be our brother's keepers. Any field that can contribute to the understanding and prevention of the increasing numbers of attempted and successful mass murders in the United States must work on this for the next weeks, months, and years. Psychiatry is surely one of these.

Diagnosis
Amidst all the initial speculation on the reasons for the tragedy, my wife noticed an e-mail from a psychiatrist that struck us as possibly revealing deeper issues, some perhaps indirectly relevant. The subject was “Autism not a Mental Illness.” Autism was one of the initial diagnoses associated with this killer. Beyond such premature diagnostic speculations, the e-mail was reacting to a CNN coverage in which a physician and a reporter discussed that autism may not be an illness, since NIMH was considering autism and other mental conditions as “neurogenerative.” Perhaps, the e-mailer suggested, if autism was not considered to be a mental illness, would that be better because then, if the murderer did not have a mental illness, mental illness could not be blamed for the mass murder.

This argument, though cumbersome, leads us to take a step back and take a bit of a detour. First of all, there are no mental illnesses, at least so far as the terminology goes for the DSM and ICD classifications of mental conditions. This is more important than mere semantics. These conditions are called disorders, not illnesses or diseases. The prime definition of disorders, in my Webster’s dictionary, is “confusion.”

However “disorder” is defined, it causes mental conditions to appear to be different from medical illnesses. It implies that clinicians other than psychiatrists can be expert in the diagnosis and treatment of those disorders. Indeed, that is one of the issues that I was concerned about in the March 2010 blog, “The DSM Process: More Questions Than Answers.” The cautionary statement as to who can make a diagnosis reads: “It can be used by a wide range of health and mental health professionals, including psychiatrists and other physicians, psychologists, social workers, nurses occupational and rehabilitation therapists and counselors.”

So much for the medical expertise of psychiatrists in making a diagnosis. As far as I know, that consideration will not change in the upcoming DSM-5.

This is a scenario that is more likely to lead to an inadequate diagnosis or missed diagnosis. Moreover, diagnosis, though necessary for reimbursement, research, and a general sense of what is wrong, should only be the necessary, but not sufficient, step in understanding an individual. Adequate time and analysis is required. As the bio-psycho-social model implies, we have to look far and wide to try to understand anyone. If indeed the perpetrator of the Newtown tragedy fell on the Autism spectrum, how often does a mass murderer have that diagnosis?

Guns
As so many have commented, the ease of obtaining automatic weapons can indeed contribute to mass destruction. If someone has untreated mental problems, the risk also increases. Adding guns and knowing how to use them, to someone with apparent mental problems, surely increases the odds of something bad happening.

Any positive reinforcement of gun use, outside of controlled situations such as hunting, may cause more unnecessary harm than benefit. Certainly, we have a lot of positive reinforcement and modeling of a gun culture in our Constitution, our seemingly endless war, and violence in the media. The more impersonal ways of relating on the internet may veer us more toward the social deficits and lack of empathy that is characteristic of the Autism spectrum.

Evil
I never used the term evil professionally or personally until I worked in prison part time at the end of my clinical career. For many of the inmates I saw, mental disorders, including substance abuse, seemed to play a significant role in their crimes. Gang involvement, where self-esteem and identity, was enhanced through group process, was another significant factor for many. On a rare occasion, neither a mental disorder, including antisocial personality disorder, nor gang behavior, seemed to be enough of an explanation.1 That is when I began to think more seriously of evil, as did many in the aftermath of this recent tragedy. The Governor of Connecticut claimed that “evil visited this community . . . .” Later he expanded that to mental illness dressed in evil. Perhaps that can be further expanded to mental illness dressed in evil and a holster.

Recommendations
Soon after the tragedy, one of the fathers of a child killed tearfully pleaded for society to learn from what happened in order to prevent future mass murders. Here’s what I think psychiatry can contribute:

• Autism, Asperger, and most every other mental condition worthy of our prime focus should be called diseases, not disorders
• All such diagnoses should be made or certified by a psychiatrist to qualify for medical insurance coverage
• Do not make public diagnoses of anyone not personally examined, per our Goldwater Rule
• This tragedy, following too many others, should spur further study of where criminal behavior ends and psychiatric disease begins, if indeed there is even such a line
• All psychiatrists should spend some clinical time in a correctional institution, either during residency or later for continuing education
• Find better ways to educate the public about the early signs of homicidal risk
• Advocate for a system of safe reporting of those felt to be at- risk for homicidal behavior
• Provide better resources in order to improve early treatment of homicidal ideation
• Convene a representative body of those injured by public violence and loved ones of those murdered, to work on a national Task Force to reduce mass murder
• Advocate for a special anniversary date or holiday, December 14th, to not only remember the Connecticut tragedy or others like it, but also as a way to monitor how we are doing as a nation and a profession in trying to prevent more such tragedies.

Reference
1. Moffic HS. Better Off in Prison; 2011. Psychiatric Times. http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/blog/couchincrisis/content/article/10168/1850954. Accessed December 17, 2012.

 

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by Ann Sparks, RN, APN, FNP, NP-C | January 10, 2013 3:26 PM EST

I believe evil (and likely mentally ill as well) did visit Newtown, CN December the 14th. Everyone knows that those who are not evil would not have done such a thing. Not even most cases of mental illness can be said to cause this level of human destruction without apparent justifiable cause.

As a Nurse Practitioner, I have worked in mental health and addictions. With the treatment of addictions, we always look at the spiritual aspect of the patent. Clearly addiction is a SPIRITUAL DISEASE. Whether you want to call it evil or not, is totally up to you. Now that I have had a number of years in addictions, I can say that there are many illnesses beyond drug addiction, that have a foundation in SPIRITUAL DISEASE: Drug Addiction, Alcoholism, Gambling Addiction, Eating Addiction, Sexual Addiction, Internet Addiction, Codependency... and the list goes on.
I ask, "Why would we think that shootings that occur are anything less then a SPIRITUAL CONDITION?" Particularly when coupled with IQ or mental health deficits!

Let's truly get back to treating the WHOLE patient, body, mind and spirit. It seems that phobias regarding religion and spirituality are crippling this country to the point of no return. Let us turn the trend around and look at 12-Step Recovery on a larger scale... because it's not just addicts and alcoholics that have spiritual deficits!

by James OBrien | January 10, 2013 2:11 PM EST

type stable should be "unstable"

by James OBrien | January 10, 2013 2:11 PM EST

There is no doubt based on all the information in the press that she failed to properly secure the weapons in the home from a relative she thought to be mentally stable. This is the number one responsibility of a gun owner. There is no doubt that her living arrangements with her adult son were indicative of a pathological mother-son relationship.

I have no doubt had she survived that she would have been sued for everything she had.

She is clearly culpable both morally and legally.

If she is a victim it is of her own lack of judgment. I am not willing to put her in the same innocent victim category as the six year olds.

Being nonjudgmental is the hubristic false virtue of our times. It is like the question on the MMPI, "I never get angry". A positive response doesn't mean you don't get angry, it means you are in denial of normal human emotions. You will often notice that the people who claim never to make judgments are in fact always making judgments.

One thing we can do individually is inquire about firearms in the house when we see a suicidal or homicidal patient and do everything possible within HIPAA to encourage relatives to remove them.

by Lynn and Steve Moffic | January 10, 2013 1:37 PM EST

Thanks for your follow-up response, Dr. O'Brien. So I can understand better where you are drawing your conclusions, can you provide us the sources for "We know that . . .".
Although I am quite loathe to blame the mother here without detailed knowledge of the family history, and after all she is a victim as well and can't give her side of the story, I am all for improved parenting. Do you have suggestions of how this can be improved?
And, wouldn't it be helpful to hear the father's side of the story (unless I missed it)?

Steve

by James OBrien | January 10, 2013 11:56 AM EST

I have no trouble blaming the mother's actions and calling his motives Oepidal, which I am broadly defining as homicidal feelings toward a competing maternal love interest (if not necessarily the literal father). We know that this twenty year old man was motivated to mass murder because he feared his mother in his eyes loved the people at the school more than himself. This at an age where he should have been dating and been reasonably independent. The mother is the second most culpable party here. She chose to turn her spacious and expensive home into the Bates Motel, instead of helping her son become a man. Not getting the weapons out of the house while she had a relative living with her as she was trying to have him committed for psychiatric illness was completely reckless and irresponsible. I have absolutely no problem judging the mother's parenting skills, weapons safety procedures, common sense and finding them all deficient. The children and the adults at the school were completely innocent/blameless, she was not, and clearly enabled this tragedy.

We are all judgmental, some of us just choose to admit it. There needs to be more dialogue in this society about how families are screwing up their children and less talk about public funding and government policy. Something "had to be done" after 9-11. What we got was the TSA, the NSA, the Patriot Act and the Iraq War. These problems need to be thought through before we make sweeping changes that are likely to make things worse. Histrionic policy is histrionic acting out and almost always backfires.

Article Comment Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 Previous Next


Also by Dr Moffic

Once a Psychiatrist, Always a Psychiatrist?

Mental Bootcamp: Today Is the First Day of Your Retirement!

How to End a Psychiatric Epidemic: The Redemption of Psychiatry

Psychism: Defining Discrimination of Psychiatry

Psychiatric Eulogies for Psychiatrists Who Inspired

Mass Murder and Psychiatry

The Psychology of Guns: 12 Steps Toward More Safety

Will 2013 Be a Lucky Year for Psychiatry?






 
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