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Do you know how flawed your statistics are?

"Mental health workers" includes "drug and alcohol rehab workers" and, as the submitted article shows, drug or alcohol addiction do increase likelyhood of violence.

By including people with addiction problems you've skewed the stats.

EDIT: I mean, even the paper you cite says:

> Because serious mental illness is quite rare, it actually contributes very little to the overall rate of violence in the general population; the attributable risk has been estimated to be 3 to 5 percent, much lower than that associated with substance abuse, for example. (People with no mental disorder who abuse alcohol or drugs are nearly seven times as likely as those without substance abuse to report violent behavior).




This data makes a mockery of your anectdotal evidence. The odds of me being exposed to violence on a tour of a prison are virtually nil. It does not follow that prison violence is virtually nil.


From another source:

"Mentally ill people in hospital sometimes behave aggressively. They may try to harm other patients, staff, property or themselves. Inthe UK, the National Audit of Violence found that a third of inpatients had been treatened or made to feel unsafe while in care [Royal College of Psychiatrists 2007]. This figure rose to 44% for clinical staff and 72% of nursing staff working in these units. "

Violence is simply correlated with exposure:

patients attacked/threatened 33%

doctors attacked/threatened 44%

nurses attacked/threatened 72%

People with more direct exposure show increased risk of attack. The data are very clear.

https://www.kcl.ac.uk/ioppn/depts/hspr/research/ciemh/mhn/pr...


You've included forensic units. When a prisoner in a regular prison develops a severe mental illness they'll be transferred from prison to hospital. Or when someone is found guilty at trial they may be sent direct to a secure mental health unit. Obviously the population of people put in prison includes violent offenders.

You're also focussing on hospitals. Most people with a mental illness, even a severe illness, will not need a hospital admission.

For example: My county has a population of about 650,000 people. The local MH trust has about 4,000 to 5,000 people on their books at any time. Only about 4% of those people need an in-patient stay.


So, lets get this striaght, you <excluded> violent patients from your analysis of population violence?

Nice one!


No! And that's the point. Mental illness contributes a tiny amount to violence. Drug or alcohol addiction contribute far more, as does previous violence.

Try reading the fucking article.


This simply isn't true. There is loads of research on it. People only quote the stuff that reads counter-intuitively, but upon deeper reading into the subject, views like the ones you are expressing are easily de-bunked.


You've failed to rebut anything the article says.

The first link you posted did not aay what you thought it said - indeed it directly contradicted you.

The second link you posted takes almost a third of its data from forensic units.

> Rates of violence would also be expected to be influenced by the type of psychiatric service patients were recruited from. In particular, patients treated in forensic settings are likely to be more violent than those from other settings, not least because the majority are admitted specifically because of their violent behaviour [Coid et al., 2001].

Thus, you include people who are detained against their will by the courts because they pose a risk of harm to others but exclude anyone else with a mental illness and wonder why the rates of violence are so high.

But it's worse than that!

Look at what they count as a violent act:

> The definition of violence and aggression differed widely between studies. Types of violence recorded included physical violence, physical violence directed at staff only, verbal aggression, aggression towards objects, self-harm and sexual aggression.

You're trying to include "self harm" as "violent to other people".

Really, read the article. At least, read the studies before you cite them.

The research is very clear: people with a mental illness are more likely to be the victim of violent crime than the perpetrator; people with a mental illness are far more likely to be violent toward themselves than to other people; mental illness alone provides very little indication on risk of violence, unlike substance-dependance or previous violence.

EDIT: and again this article contradicts your point. Look at the graph on page 12 - most violence is commited by people in a forensic unit. But especially see this quote:

> 3.7 Repeated violence The studies commonly reported that a small sub-group of patients were responsible for the majority incidents, so even with this most-cherry picked sample (people who commit a crime and are then detained in a mental health hospital by the courts) we still see that violence is perpetrated by a small sub-group.




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