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Mass shooters and mental illness: Reexamining the connection [mdedge.com]

 

By Nina E. Cerfolio and Ira D. Glick,Photo: Unsplash, MDedge Psychiatry, December 5, 2023

Our psychiatric research, which found a high incidence of undiagnosed mental illness in mass shooters, was recently awarded the esteemed Psychodynamic Psychiatry Journal Prize for best paper published in the last 2 years (2022-2023). The editors noted our integrity in using quantitative data to argue against the common, careless assumption that mass shooters are not mentally ill.

Some of the mass shooters we studied were motivated by religious or political ideologies that were considered forms of terrorism. Given the current tragically violent landscape both at home and in Israel/Palestine, the “desire for destruction” is vital to understand.

Although there have been a limited number of psychiatric studies of perpetrators of mass shootings, our team took the first step to lay the groundwork by conducting a systematic, quantitative study. Our psychiatric research team’s research findings were published in the Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology and then in greater detail in Psychodynamic Psychiatry, which provided important context to the complicated backgrounds of these mass shooters who suffer from abuse, marginalization, and severe undiagnosed brain illness.

[Please click here to read more.]

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Am interested to see if there is mention of fetal alcohol spectrum disorders in the study. This preventable permanent brain damage, which really should be re-named or add a name such as embryonic alcohol exposure, as many cases involve binge drinking at before week three, when damage can be greatest and the woman has no clue she is pregnant.

Will read this piece with interest and hope this vitally important information is included.

Carey Sipp

csipppaces@icloud.com

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