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Created May 2014 Mental Illness and Violence – What does the evidence tell us? Presented by NAMI PA, Main Line, an affiliate of the National Alliance on Mental Illness Please view the final slide for NAMI PA, Main Line contact information and the link to the YouTube video of this PowerPoint with narration.

Mental Illness & Violence: What the Evidence Says

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This deck was used as part of a Google Hangout we sponsored on this topic. You can view the talk at https://plus.google.com/events/cre6tljfqum1jm2uh4js8oo8t7o. This deck contains the slides with its notes, references and links to relevant resources

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Page 1: Mental Illness  & Violence: What the Evidence Says

Created May 2014

Mental Illness and Violence – What does the evidence tell us?

Presented by NAMI PA, Main Line, an affiliate of the National Alliance on Mental Illness

Please view the final slide for NAMI PA, Main Line contact information and the link to the YouTube video of this PowerPoint with narration.

Page 2: Mental Illness  & Violence: What the Evidence Says

Mental Illness and Violence – What does the evidence tell us?

Ingrid Waldron, President,

NAMI PA, Main Line,an affiliate of the National Alliance on Mental Illness

www.NAMIpaMainLine.org

May 4, 2014

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Page 3: Mental Illness  & Violence: What the Evidence Says

YouTube Presentation

The video that accompanies this PowerPoint presentation will launch after this slide.

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Page 4: Mental Illness  & Violence: What the Evidence Says

Introduction• Review best evidence concerning relationships

between mental illness and physical violence in the US and other Western countries in recent decades, including:– violence against others by people with mental

illness

– violence against people with mental illness (including both violence by others and suicide)

– evidence-based approaches to reducing these problems

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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• For this discussion, major mental illness includes:– Schizophrenia and other psychoses (which

includes delusions, hearing voices and hallucinations)

– Bipolar disorder– Depression and anxiety disorders– Personality disorders (e.g. antisocial

personality disorder or borderline personality disorder)

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Page 6: Mental Illness  & Violence: What the Evidence Says

People with major mental illness are more likely to commit violence against others.

• People with major mental illness are ~2-6 times more likely than the general public to commit violence.

• ~ Half of the victims are intimate partners or other family members.

• Only ~15% of the victims are strangers.

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Page 7: Mental Illness  & Violence: What the Evidence Says

But most people with major mental illness are not violent. Only a small proportion of total violence is committed by people with major mental illness.

• Only ~5-15% of people who have major mental illness were violent in the past year.

• Only ~5-15% of violence is committed by people who have major mental illness.

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Page 8: Mental Illness  & Violence: What the Evidence Says

The risk of committing violence against others varies, depending on the person’s characteristics.

For example, people with schizophrenia and other psychoses are ~3-4 times more likely to commit violence, but risk of violence is much lower if:

– no previous history of violence– no substance abuse or dependence– in treatment and compliant with treatment.

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Page 9: Mental Illness  & Violence: What the Evidence Says

Variation, continuedIn this US population sample, people with major mental illness, but not substance abuse/dependence or a previous history of committing violence, did not have elevated rates of

violence over the next three years.People who had major mental illness plus substance abuse or dependence and/or a history of previous violence had increased rates of future violence.History of previous violence was a much stronger predictor of future violence than major mental illness.

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Page 10: Mental Illness  & Violence: What the Evidence Says

Suggests Complex Causal Pathways

e.g. Mental Illness

self-medicating symptoms

Substance Abuse

disinhibition +

more often in situations

where violence is common

Increased Risk of Violence

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Page 11: Mental Illness  & Violence: What the Evidence Says

Homicide• ~10-20% of homicides are committed by

people with major mental illness.

• For multiple victim homicides in public locations, it appears that at least half are committed by people with major mental illness. These get much media attention, but they account for only ~one in a thousand of all homicide deaths.

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Page 12: Mental Illness  & Violence: What the Evidence Says

Questions and Comments

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Page 13: Mental Illness  & Violence: What the Evidence Says

People with major mental illness are more likely than others to be

victims of violence.

• People with major mental illness are ~3-10 times more likely than the general public to report being a victim of violence.

• People with major mental illness are ~3-7 times more likely to be a victim of homicide.

• ~15-35% of people with major mental illness report being a victim of violence in the past year.

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Victimization, continued

• There appear to be several reasons why people with major mental illness more often are victims of violence.

• People with major mental illness are more likely to be unemployed and to have very low income, so they are more likely to be homeless and/or live in dangerous neighborhoods.

• Some people with major mental illness are less aware of safety risks and how to avoid them.

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Page 15: Mental Illness  & Violence: What the Evidence Says

People with major mental illness are more likely than others to commit suicide.

• People with major mental illness have ~5-15 times higher risk of suicide than the general public.

• 60-70% of suicides are committed by people with major mental illness.

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Questions and Comments

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Mental Illness and Violence –What can we do?

Research evidence supports several approaches.

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Evidence-based Approaches to Suicide Prevention

• Most effective approach = educating primary care physicians to recognize and treat depression and suicidality (decreases suicide rates by 22-73%).

• Second most effective approach = restriction of access to guns and other highly lethal means of committing suicide (decreases suicide by 2-33%).

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Evidence-based gun control

Restriction of access to guns should target people who have characteristics known to be associated with high risk for violence during time periods known to be high-risk for violence. This includes:

– anyone convicted of a violent crime– anyone subject to a domestic violence restraining

order– anyone with a recent conviction related to drug or

alcohol abuse– anyone recently released from involuntary

hospitalization for mental illness and deemed dangerous to self or others

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Preventing Violence Against Others and Violent Victimization

• Preventive court-ordered outpatient treatment combined with better access to good mental health services appears to reduce violence against others and violent victimization for people with major mental illness.

• Much more information is needed about effective treatments, including treatment for substance abuse in combination with mental illness and the role of services such as safe housing.

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Page 21: Mental Illness  & Violence: What the Evidence Says

Mental Illness, Stigma and Violence

Violence by people with mental illness (especially as exaggerated in entertainment and news media)

Increased stigma against individuals with mental illness

Contributes to avoiding treatment and probably also inadequate funding for needed treatment+ less access to good jobs and housing

Greater risk of violence by people with mental illness

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Additional Resources• For information and help for someone with

major mental illness, contact– NAMI (National Alliance on Mental Illness)

http://nami.org/, 800-950-6264

– NAMI PA, Main Line NAMIpaMainLine.org,[email protected], 267-251-6240

• For information and help for someone with substance abuse, go to www.helpguide.org/topics/addiction.htm

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Avoiding Violence in Your Home

• If a family member or friend with mental illness threatens violence, helpful advice to avoid violence is available at www.treatmentadvocacycenter.org/get-help/respond-in-a-crisis.

• Advice for getting a person with mental illness help that can prevent a mental health crisis from escalating to threats of violence is available at www.NAMIpaMainLine.org/info-resources/info-on-mental-illness-coping/ (see e. g. Communicating with a Loved One Who Has a Mental Illness and Help Guides).

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Preventing Suicide

If you or a family member or friend is at risk for suicide, helpful advice is available at www.helpguide.org/topics/suicide_prevention.htm

and https://mhfa.com.au/sites/mhfa.com.au/files/MHFA_suicide_guidelinesA4%202014%20Revised.pdf

NAMI PA, Main Line Copyright, 2014, Ingrid Waldron

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Page 25: Mental Illness  & Violence: What the Evidence Says

Created May 2014

Presented by NAMI PA, Main Line an affiliate of the National Alliance on Mental Illness

[email protected]

This PowerPoint presentation is available at:www.NAMIpaMainLine.org/info-resources/info-on-mental-illness-coping/

The full YouTube presentation can be found at:www.youtube.com/watch?v=PuHph-EjZqs#t=15

All information is current as of publication date; please let us know if you encounter broken hyperlinks.