Are Americans Crazy?


By Dr. Glenn Mollette

Has America simply gone crazy? We never want to think that we are a bit crazy or that people we love are experiencing craziness but it is reality. America has an overwhelming problem with craziness or I should say mental health issues.

Over a 12-month period, 27% of adults in the U.S. will experience some sort of mental health disorder, making the U.S. the country with the highest prevalence. Mental health disorders include mood disorders, anxiety disorders, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, and substance abuse. Over one's entire lifetime, the average American has a 47.4% chance of having some kind of mental health disorder. Yes, that's almost one in two. The projected lifetime prevalence is even higher: for people who reach age 75 it is 55%. World Health Organization data does not take into account eating disorders, personality disorders, and schizophrenia; the incidence of these disorders together is about 15% in the U.S., according to the National Institute of Mental Health.

The incidence of mental health disorders varies widely across the globe, and determining the patterns is tricky. After the U.S., Ukraine, Colombia, New Zealand, Lebanon, and France have the next highest rates of mental health disorders of any kind, all falling between 18.9% and 21.4% in a 12-month period. Japan, the People's Republic of China, Nigeria, and Israel have the lowest rates (between 6.0% and 7.4%), especially for depression. For substance abuse, the U.S. is up there, but not the highest: We are topped by South Africa and Ukraine. As with the U.S., when you look at lifetime prevalence in any country, the risk for any disorder goes way up.

Despite ongoing research, the predictors of mental health disorders are still evasive, even for the most common, like depression. While a nation's wealth factor would seem to have an impact, it's clear from the data that the relationship is complex. Ron Kessler, Ph.D., the Harvard researcher who headed much of the WHO's mental health research, says that by and large people in less-developed countries are less depressed: After all, he says, when you're literally trying to survive, who has time for depression? Americans, on the other hand, many of whom lead relatively comfortable lives; blow other nations away in the depression factor, leading some to suggest that depression is a "luxury disorder".

There is a zero cure for mental health issues. However, here are some suggestions for improvement. Have a daily schedule. Get up and go to bed routinely. Get adequate sleep but you don't need more than seven to eight hours. Engage in meaningful activity daily. Work a job. Work in a garden. Clean your house. Mow grass. Pull weeds. Go to school. Have some type of daily exercise. Breaking a little sweat every day is healthy. Engage in meaningful relationships at church, a club, work or with friends and family. We all need real people in our lives. Limit your technology, television and social media time. Too much can drain and depress you.

If you have mental illness or family members suffering from mental illness get it out on the table and start talking about coping, a strategic plan, counseling and working together to make life manageable. Ignoring it only results in everybody going crazy.

Credits: World Health Organization and The Atlantic.

Dr. Glenn Mollette is the author of 12 books. His syndicated column is read in all 50 states.

Contact him at GMollette@aol.com. Learn more at www.glennmollette.com Like his facebook page at www.facebook.com/glennmollette.

More Resources


01/10/2025
Carter Funeral Brings Rare, Needed Vision of Peace


more info


01/10/2025
Three More Biden Deceptions
The president can believe what he wants to believe, and at this point, there appears to be no convincing him otherwise.

more info


01/10/2025
A Nation Suffers Whiplash Between Biden and Trump
On any other day this might seem strange

more info


01/10/2025
Biden Admin Told Us To Censor True Info


more info


01/10/2025
Facebook Admits Error--'Fact Checkers' Still Complicit
Mark Zuckerberg seems to want to reverse Facebook's censorship efforts, but those publications that participated in the program are complicit.

more info


01/10/2025
In Defense of DEI
DEI refers to three simple but important words: diversity, equity and inclusion. These three values are indispensable

more info


01/10/2025
Woke Religion Burned People's Homes to the Ground
The wildfire devastation of Los Angeles occurred largely as a result of people in power adhering blindly and madly to a very bad religion.

more info


01/10/2025
LA's Poor Communication Should Have Residents Fuming


more info


01/10/2025
Republican Party's New Ground Game


more info


01/10/2025
Opening the DNC's Black Box
Why we're publishing a previously undisclosed list of all 448 members of the Democratic National Committee

more info


01/10/2025
The Most Under-Reported Story About Biden
What was the most under-reported news story during the Biden presidency? In the last week or so, there has been a sudden burst of recognition of the extent to which Democrats and the media worked together to cover up Biden's progressing cognitive decline. One media figure after another has com

more info


01/10/2025
Biden Is No Carter
In terms of character the 46th president doesn't come close to matching the 39th.

more info


01/10/2025
Biden Says He Could've Beaten Trump. That's Delusional
Not only is Biden overestimating his political skills, he's also ungraciously insulting his vice president.

more info


01/10/2025
Dresden in Los Angeles and Our Confederacy of Dunces
LA is burning. And the derelict people responsible are worried that they are found out as charlatans and empty suits.

more info


01/10/2025
The L.A. Apocalypse Was Entirely Predictable
Today on TAP: The hills above my hometown regularly catch fire, and developers regularly build there nonetheless.

more info



Custom Search

More Politics Articles:

Related Articles

Kudos to Trump for Cracking Down on H-1B Visa Abuse


President Trump's administration is delivering for American workers. During his time as President, the number of H-1B guestworker visa denials are at a decade high.

We Need a Healthcare System that Supports the New American Workforce


Americans are increasingly leaving their traditional 9-to-5 jobs to work for themselves. Last year, nearly 57 million people performed freelance work -- up from 53 million in 2014.

When Collusion Twice Saved the World


In November 1971, after serving a year as an intelligence officer supporting the secret American war in Laos, I returned to an assignment in the Intelligence Early Warning Center (INEW) at Headquarters, Strategic Air Command (SAC), near Omaha. The INEW office attached to the SAC War Room was buried three stories underground in a concrete and led-sheathed vault behind massive steel doors. From there SAC could direct global Armageddon while (hopefully) withstanding 30 or more nuclear strikes.

Education Secretary DeVos: This is a Disgrace


College students have racked up $1.5 trillion in student loan debt. These students take on staggering debt and blindly head off to college, hoping for the best. For many college students, this is a formula for disaster. These leaders of tomorrow have been abandoned to fend for themselves. They are told, "You'll figure it out." Really? Students going off to college are receiving little or no counseling on this significant — possibly life-changing — financial encumbrance, which is compounded by virtually no investment in their career development: knowing what to major in based on their unique design. Students are grossly uninformed financially and unprepared to think critically about who they are, which is crucial to knowing which career paths to pursue that "fit." This is a lethal combination which potentially cancels out academic and life success.

Medicare for All is the Wrong Prescription


In the fall of 2017, when Senator Bernie Sanders unveiled his vision for the future of the U.S. healthcare system (Medicare for All), I wrote a piece for the Center for Vision and Values titled, "Medicare for All is Good for None." In the piece, I argued that using the Medicare template as a model capable of absorbing quadruple the number of current enrollees was flawed from the start. Obviously, Senator Sanders did not read my piece.

Democrats' Green Schemes Threaten the Poor


Democrats claim to be champions of the poor. Yet their environmental policies make low-income communities even poorer.

Greenhouse Gas Credits Don't Help the Environment -- Or Consumers


General Motors Co. and Fiat Chrysler have a plan to survive a Democratic president.

End Foreign Freeloading - Don't Import It


Since day one in office, President Trump has been eager to put America first -- even when it has meant upending norms, upsetting political allies, and straining relationships abroad. This eagerness is worth applauding.

Keep Canadian Drugs Out Of U.S. Medicine Cabinets


The Trump administration recently proposed two rules that would allow states, pharmacies, and drug wholesalers to import non-FDA approved medicines from Canada.

Coronavirus and the US-UK Free Trade Agreement


The coronavirus has roiled global commerce. How will this pandemic influence trade policy? The upcoming US-UK negotiations will serve as a test.

NEPA Reform is Long Overdue


Ever wonder why it took just over a year to build the Empire State Building - but can easily take three years or longer to build a new road today?

Distillers Poured Resources Into Fighting COVID-19, Now They Need Congress' Help


The coronavirus pandemic has produced thousands of everyday heroes, from doctors and nurses to grocery store workers and delivery drivers.

The Oil Market Doesn't Need an Intervention


In late spring, oil prices dipped below zero for the first time ever. Futures contracts for May delivery traded as low as negative $37 a barrel, as producers and speculators paid refineries and storage facilities to take excess crude off their hands.

Want Racial Justice? Start With Filling Out Your Census


Those living in our nation's poor and minority communities have historically gone undercounted in the U.S. Census. For instance, nearly one million Black Americans went uncounted nationwide in the 2010 Census.

This Healthcare "Watchdog" is No Friend of Coronavirus Patients


Finally, there's a bit of good news in the fight against COVID-19.