THURSDAY, May 8 (HealthDay News) -- Serious mental illness costs
Americans at least $193 billion a year in lost earnings alone, a
new report shows.
The study broadly defines mood and anxiety disorders that
greatly limit a person's ability to function for at least 30 days a
year, including instances of any condition linked to suicidal
behaviors or frequent violent acts, as serious mental illness
(SMI).
"Lost earning potential, costs associated with treating
coexisting conditions, Social Security payments, homelessness and
incarceration are just some of the indirect costs associated with
mental illnesses that have been difficult to quantify," Dr. Thomas
R. Insel, director of the National Institute of Mental Health, said
in a prepared statement. "This study shows us that just one source
of these indirect costs is staggeringly high."
Insel's agency funded the study. The results were published in
the May issue of
The American Journal of Psychiatry.
The researchers analyzed 2002 data collected from a nationally
representative study of almost 5,000 Americans, aged 18 to 64, to
determine earnings lost in the year prior to the survey. They found
that respondents with SMI reported receiving about 40 percent less
in earnings than those without serious mental disorders, who earned
an average $38,852.
Researchers arrived at the $193.2 billion figure by
extrapolating these results to the general population. They figured
most of this comes from the lessened amount of income people with
SMI were likely to earn, while the rest of the loss comes from the
increased odds that their mental state would prevent them from
having any earnings at all.
"The results of this study confirm the belief that mental
disorders contribute to enormous losses of human productivity,"
lead researcher Ronald C. Kessler, of Harvard University, said in a
prepared statement. "Yet this estimate is probably conservative,
because the [survey used] did not assess people in hospitals or
prisons, and included very few participants with autism,
schizophrenia or other chronic illnesses that are known to greatly
affect a person's ability to work. The actual costs are probably
higher that what we have estimated."
More information
The U.S. Surgeon General has more about
mental illness.