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Nearly 1 in 7 US adults may have supposed personality disorders

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I'm sure if people quit these awful TV situation comedies with laugh

machines and read books things may improve. They are just making the minds

unresourceful. N

 

 

Personality Disorders Common in U.S.

 

http://story.news./news?tmpl=story & cid=97 & ncid

=97 & e=6 & u=/hsn/20040806/hl_hsn/personalitydisorderscommoninus

 

 

By Kathleen Doheny

HealthDay Reporter

 

FRIDAY, Aug. 6 (HealthDayNews) -- Personality disorders are much more common

in the United States than researchers had thought, affecting nearly one in

seven adult Americans, a new survey finds.

 

Researchers say that 31 million people, or 15 percent of the adult

population, suffer from at least one type of personality disorder.

 

 

Roughly half of these people had obsessive-compulsive personality disorder,

and a sizable minority were paranoid and harbored an unusual distrust of

others, according to the review.

 

 

" This is the first national survey ever conducted on the prevalence of seven

of the 10 personality disorders, " said Bridget Grant, lead author of the

study, which appears in the July issue of the Journal of Clinical

Psychiatry.

 

 

Researchers used definitions of these disorders from the American

Psychiatric Association´s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental

Disorders, which helps physicians diagnose mental health conditions.

 

 

" We interviewed face-to-face over 43,000 adult Americans that was a

representative sample of the U.S., " said Grant, who is chief of the

Laboratory of Epidemiology and Biometry at the National Institute on Alcohol

Abuse and Alcoholism.

 

 

Grant´s team asked a series of questions, and then analyzed the answers to

see whether the information pointed to a personality.

 

 

" We were surprised by the 15 percent figure, " Grant said. " That translates

to 30.8 million Americans who have at least one of the seven personality

disorders [they asked about in the survey]. I was thinking it was maybe more

like 9 or 10 percent. "

 

 

Most common was obsessive-compulsive personality disorder, suffered by 16.4

million (nearly 8 percent) of adults. " The person is totally preoccupied

with rules, schedules, the need to have perfectionism, " Grant explained.

" Miserly spending habits are tied in with the obsessive-compulsive

personality. They have a compulsion to hang onto money. "

 

 

More than 9 million, or 4.4 percent, had a paranoid personality disorder.

The person with this problem generally demonstrates patterns of distrust and

is suspicious of others, she said.

 

 

Nearly 8 million (3.6 percent) had antisocial personality disorder. These

people " constantly break the law, hurt other people, " Grant said. They

demonstrate antisocial behavior, such as hurting animals, before the age of

15.

 

 

And 6.5 million (3.1 percent) had schizoid personality disorder, in which he

or she detaches from social relationships and has a very restricted range of

emotional expression.

 

 

Nearly 5 million (2.4 percent) had avoidant personality disorder. " This

person is very socially inhibited, " Grant said. " They feel inadequate as

people and get sensitive to comments. "

 

 

About 4 million (1.8 percent) had histrionic personality disorder, marked by

excessive expression of emotions and the seeking of excessive attention.

Another 1 million (0.5 percent) had dependent personality disorder, marked

by clingy behavior and the need to be taken care of excessively.

 

 

Because some people have more than one personality disorder, the numbers

total more than the 30 million, the number affected by at least one such

disorder.

 

 

" The survey was very well done, " said another expert, Dr. William Narrow,

associate director of the Division of Research for the American Psychiatric

Association. " It has a very large sample size, and the methods and

techniques that were used to gather the data, I think, were all very

rigorous and well done. "

 

 

" This is the first major survey that has attempted to take the diagnostic

criteria we have for personality disorder, turn these criteria into

questions and take them into the community and ask them of people in the

household. "

 

 

 

 

 

In a second paper, published in the August issue of the Archives of General

Psychiatry, Grant reports that alcohol and drug abuse are likely to occur

along with the personality disorders, a fact that Narrow said has long been

observed by clinicians.

 

The value of the study for consumers, Grant said, is to inspire people to

talk to their doctors if they think they might suffer from one of the

personality disorders, as treatment is effective.

 

More information

 

Learn about various mental health problems at the National Institute of

Mental Health.

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