Print

Print


----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Millions of depressed people are going undiagnosed, experts say
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

WASHINGTON (October 10, 1997 00:28 a.m. EDT http://www.nando.net) -
Millions of people are walking around depressed without even realizing it,
and their doctors and families are missing what could be a serious illness
as well, experts said on Thursday.

More than two-thirds of people with clinical depression go undiagnosed, but
the disease is easily treated, doctors, psychologists and members of
Congress told a news conference.

"There's 17 million people in the United States who suffer from depression,
and less than a third of them seek treatment," Michael Faenza, president of
the National Mental Health Association (NMHA), said.

Steven Hyman, director of the National Institute of Mental Health, said
most people still believed the symptoms of depression, which include
persistent sad or anxious moods, sleeping too much or too little, appetite
changes and fatigue, were some sort of character defect.

"Based on everything we know from biochemical science, we can say that
depression is not a moral failing," he said.

"You can't just tell people to pull themselves up by their bootstraps."

On Thursday the NMHA, the American Psychiatric Association, the National
Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI) and the National Depressive and
Manic-Depressive Association sponsored a nationwide series of free,
confidential screenings for depression.

Faenza said such screenings in the past had turned up the extent of the
problem. "Up to 60 percent of people screened have been found to have
depression," he said in an interview.

Perhaps people self-selected, he added -- meaning that those who felt they
might be depressed tended to go to screenings. But he said the stigma of
mental illness was stopping people from getting help.

Senators and members of Congress, opening one free screening in a Senate
office building, said their own experiences showed how ignorant people were
about depression.

"My father committed suicide," Nevada Sen. Harry Reid said.

"As I look back, (I realize) my father was depressed a lot of the time. Had
we known my father would shoot himself, we would have been more concerned
about this thing we call depression," Reid, a Democrat, added.

Michigan Democrat Lynn Rivers said her battle with bipolar disorder, also
known as manic depression, nearly cost her the race for Congress when her
opponent used it against her.

"It never impacted my ability to serve," she said. "This is a disease that
is treatable. This is a disease that is biologically based."

But Hyman said most doctors did not even recognize depression. Only 40
percent of people who are depressed and who see their doctors are diagnosed
and referred for treatment, he said.

"Only 20 percent of children going to pediatricians are being recognized
and treated," he added.

Untreated depression costs the U.S. economy $43 billion a year in lost
workdays, eventual hospital stays and other losses, Laurie Flynn, executive
director of NAMI, said.


By MAGGIE FOX, Health and Science Correspondent
Copyright 1997 Nando.net
Copyright 1997 Reuters
<http://www.nando.net/newsroom/ntn/health/101097/health6_13143_noframes.html>
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

[log in to unmask]