AP/ September 6, 2011, 11:16 AM

38% of Europeans are mentally ill, study says

The most common problems include anxiety disorders, insomnia, depression, alcohol and drug dependence and dementia, the study said.

The most common problems include anxiety disorders, insomnia, depression, alcohol and drug dependence and dementia, the study said. / iStockphoto

LONDON - Some 38 percent of Europeans, or 165 million people, suffer from mental illness or neurological disorders on a broad spectrum ranging from anxiety to dementia, a new study published Tuesday says. Most are not being treated, though some experts said many may not need psychiatric help.

Researchers drew on previous surveys of mental health and applied specific criteria to determine how many people had a disorder. The data covered more than 500 million people in the 27 European Union countries plus Switzerland, Iceland and Norway, according to the study paid for by the non-profit European College of Neuropsychopharmacology.

More than 90 different mental and neurological problems were considered, including those often found in children, such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, to those often found in the elderly, such as the dementia in Alzheimer's patients.

Using such a broad definition of mental health and neurological disorders might artificially inflate the problem, some experts said.

"Not all of these people require psychiatric interventions," said Matt Muijen, a mental health expert at the World Health Organization's European office in Copenhagen who was not linked to the research. "The 38 percent is indicative of stress in society, not necessarily psychiatric disorders."

Because researchers in other areas use varying definitions of what constitutes a mental health problem, it is hard to compare European rates to those elsewhere, he said. In the U.S., for example, the National Institute of Mental Health estimates about 26 percent of adults have some type of mental disorder.

The rates of mental and neurological disorders didn't appear to be rising, compared to a similar study in 2005. The most common problems include anxiety disorders, insomnia, depression, alcohol and drug dependence and dementia. Experts estimated only one-third of people receive treatment.

Other experts said the numbers of people with mental health problems appeared higher than what is commonly believed because most patients don't report their illness and because this study includes disorders in children and the elderly.

"Although the figure seems shockingly high, this is the most rigorous study done in Europe," said Graham Thornicroft, a professor of community psychiatry at the Institute of Psychiatry at King's College London. He was not linked to the study.

"The real tragedy is that so few people with mental health problems receive treatment," Thornicroft said.

Hans-Ulrich Wittchen, one of the study's authors, said many patients still face discrimination and limited services when seeking treatment.

"Mental health disorders are Europe's largest health care challenge in the 21st century," he said.

The study was published in the group's journal, "European Neuropsychopharmacology," and presented at its annual meeting in Paris on Tuesday. None of the study's authors reported a conflict of interest.

© 2011 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
49 Comments Add a Comment
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rf35 says:
CBS forgot to make the obvious connection: circumcision is not common in Europe and being intact makes it easier to masturbate and masturbation causes mental illness. Europe could reverse this trend of mental illness if they would simply mutilate all boys shortly after birth.
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amerilatino replies:
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As humor, your comment is pitiful, as serious discourse, it's hilarious.
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Transatlantique says:
That's nothing compared to America's much higher percentage.
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enwr77 says:
What are they going to do now, drug them all so there will be no more unrests? Nice try to quiet dissent.
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doctajim says:
Ahh yessss! Psychopharmacology - gee, guess that means everyone needs the "drugs" that will make this "nonprofit" agency's fund source (obviously funded by pharmaceutical companies) even richer. Gosh, then all the side effects to those "helpful" mental "health" drugs need even more drugs to help with those side effects. What a racket - whether the U.S. or Europe - it's all about lousy, biased, and self-serving "research".
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netjunkie1 says:
The rest hang out in Amsterdam.
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OnTheRoad01 says:
It is also amazing that 38% of Europeans or 165 million people do Medical Research Studies! Do people honestly make a living doing these things?
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Robin DeArcos says:
ya know i dont know who in the hell prints this ****..but thay could star a world war..were in the hell do we get the people that do all the studys on this.?????
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ddaryl1 says:
then it must be close to 90% here in the USA..
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nanooknw01 says:
Well if 38% of them are mentally ill what does that say for us?
We have the biggest bunch of homophobic, sharia law fearing,
gun toting, woman hating, anti science maniacs ever.
This passes as normal and the rest of us who do not care to
be armed and dangerous in a modern society are looked on
as weak.
What does it say when a good percent of your population is
stuck in the 19th Century?
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Transatlantique replies:
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You left out man hating. We have a much higher rate of baby male genital mutilation, which is a sure sign of insanity and misandry.
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duxpasha says:
If 38% of any population is ill maybe the problem is not the population but the doctors that want to catalog everything as an illness.
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