asked 63.2k views
4 votes
Mentally ill individuals who make the news are typical of those with mental illness.

True
False

asked
User Cleptus
by
8.0k points

2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:

False.

Lets say something with MDD (Major Depressive Disorder) gets on the news for committing a horrible crime and the news uses that as a way to excuse away their behavior and/or to say everyone with MDD would act that way.

I, as someone who has been professionally diagnosed with MDD for over a year now, would know logically that my mental illness, while affects some of my actions, makes me more self destructive. Meaning the most I'll do to other people in pursuit to harm myself would be to push them away from me and try to get them out of my life if they are good for me.

My MDD doesn't make me violent towards anyone but myself.

However if someone has only ever heard the mention of that mental illness through the news now they will equate it with violence and harm to others. Giving them a perception of me when I tell them my diagnoses that I am violent and harmful and I'll eventually do something to hurt them or someone else, when that simply is not true.

answered
User Fisakhan
by
8.5k points
5 votes
True. The answer is in the sentence. If they say "mentally ill individuals who make the news..." then they are mentally ill, get it?
answered
User Dmitry Leskov
by
9.1k points

No related questions found

Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.