new logo

 

In the News!

From the Desk of Oscar Wright, Ph.D.

United Advocates for Children and Families

Can Creativity Foreshadow Mental Illness?


Ernest Hemingway     Sacramento Capitol facebook


Greetings!

    

1/30/13 

 

Can Creativity Foreshadow Mental Illness?

  

Article by  Christine Hsu | Medical Daily

  

Creativity is frequently paired with mental illness, according to a new study that confirms the stereotype that people in creative professions are significantly more susceptible to psychiatric disorders than the general population.

 

The finding, published Oct. 9 in the Journal of Psychiatric Research, is particularly true for writers, who are at a higher risk of anxiety and bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, unipolar depression, and drug abuse.

  

Additionally, Swedish researchers at the Karolinska Institute found that writers were twice as likely to kill themselves compared to the general population.

  

Lead researcher Simon Kyaga, consultant in psychiatry and doctoral student at the Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, and his team found that dancers and photographers were also more likely to have bipolar disorder.

  

Researchers noted as a group, people who have creative professions were no more likely to suffer from mental conditions than other people, but these creative types were more likely to have a close relative with a disorder like anorexia and, to some extent, autism.

  

Experts say that the latest findings suggest that mental illnesses should be perceived in a new light and that certain traits associated with psychiatric conditions might be valuable or desirable.

Kyaga noted that the limited and intense interests of an autistic person and the manic drive of a bipolar patient might provide the essential focus and determination for genius and creativity. He added that the chaotic thoughts associated with schizophrenia might trigger the essential originality element of a masterpiece.

  

"If one takes the view that certain phenomena associated with the patient's illness are beneficial, it opens the way for a new approach to treatment," Kyaga said.  "In that case, the doctor and patient must come to an agreement on what is to be treated, and at what cost."

  

"In psychiatry and medicine generally there has been a tradition to see the disease in black-and-white terms and to endeavor to treat the patient by removing everything regarded as morbid," he added.


Previous studies also found that creativity was significantly linked to mood disorders, especially bipolar disorder. In 2010, researchers tested the intelligence of Swedish 16-year-olds and found that highly intelligent adolescents were four times more likely to develop bipolar disorder in a decade-long follow-up, according to scientists at a panel discussion at New York's World Science Festival early June.

  

Other researchers found that people who suffer bipolar disorder tend to be more creative when they're coming out of deep depression. Bipolar patients experiencing mild mania after a period of depression can generate three times as many word associations in the same amount of time as the general population.

  

However, experts say that while bipolar disorder personality traits could be advantageous to those in creative professions, it is also likely that people with bipolar disorder are more interested in careers where they can harness their creative skills.

"It is important that we do not romanticize people with mental health problems, who are too often portrayed as struggling creative geniuses," Beth Murphy, head of information at Mind, a UK mental health charity.

  

"We know that one in four people will be diagnosed with a mental health problem this year and that these individuals will come from a range of different backgrounds, professions and walks of live. Our main concern is that they get the information and support that they need and deserve," she said.

  

Panelists at the World Science Fair said that while society may benefit from the productivity of its "tortured geniuses," people affected by mental disorders that can often lead to bouts of creative energy don't always consider their small moment of brilliance to be worth their suffering.

  

"I think the creativity is just one part of something that is mostly bad," Elyn Saks, a mental health law professor at the University of Southern California who also developed schizophrenia as a young adult, said at the panel.  

 

Article from  Medical DailyVisit UACF.org  

    

Prepared by:

  

Kristene Smith 
Special Assistant to the CEO

  

Like us on Facebook 

  

Follow us on Twitter

 

United Advocates for Children and Families keeps you

IN THE NEWS with articles and information on mental health. 

 


Federal Government To Operate Most Health Exchanges, Study Finds

The federal government will operate health insurance exchanges under the Affordable Care Act in a majority of states, according to an analysis by Avalere Health, The Hill's "Healthwatch" reports. As of Thursday -- one day before the federal deadline for states to declare whether they intend to run their own exchange -- 14 states and the District of Columbia had submitted plans, while three more states publicly have committed to operate their own exchange (Viebeck, "Healthwatch," The Hill, 12/13).

Appeals Court Rules Calif. Can Reduce Medi-Cal Rates by 10%  

On Thursday, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that California can reduce Medi-Cal payments for health care providers by 10%, overturning a lower court decision that blocked the cut, the Sacramento Bee's "Capitol Alert" reports. Medi-Cal is California's Medicaid program (Yamamura, "Capitol Alert," Sacramento Bee, 12/13).


Counties Question Mental Health Funding After Medi-Cal Switch

County health departments are concerned about funding for mental health services after the state shifts children enrolled in Healthy Families to Medi-Cal, HealthyCal reports (Graebner, HealthyCal, 12/4). Healthy Families is California's Children's Health Insurance Program and Medi-Cal is California's Medicaid program.

Sacramento County Groups Nab $400K in Mental Health Grants 

On Friday, Sacramento County officials announced that four local health organizations will receive a total of nearly $400,000 in grants to provide mental health care services to residents, the Sacramento Bee reports.