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Mental health often becomes the scapegoat for lax gun laws in the US

- JUSTIN THOMAS Dr Justin Thomas is a professor of psychology at Zayed University and a columnist for The National

NMental health problems exist all over the world. What seems unique to America is how frequent mass shootings are

othing speaks of heartbreak more profoundly than a child-sized coffin. But multiply that heartbreak by 19, and we are approachin­g the level of grief that upended Uvalde, Texas. The Robb Elementary School was the site of America’s latest mass shooting. The gunman, a lone teenager, with an AR15, an assault rifle, killed two teachers and 19 children, aged between seven and 10.

Even before the shooter’s last spent shell casings had hit the ground, speculatio­n about his motives and mental health had begun. Such theorising, however, is unnecessar­y and distractin­g. These frequent mass shootings are related to US gun laws. In many states, owning a gun can be easier than owning a dog, The Economist reported.

According to census data, the US represents 4.4 per cent of the world’s population but accounts for more than 30 per cent of the world’s mass shootings. The US also ranks number one globally for civilian gun ownership, with 42 per cent of the world’s guns in American hands. A study published in the journal Violence and Victims in 2016 establishe­d a clear link between the frequency of civilian gun ownership and the rate of mass shootings worldwide.

More guns and more mass shootings become a vicious cycle. US gun sales data suggest a significan­t surge in the purchase of firearms after each mass shooting, with some people keener than ever to protect their families. The increase in gun sales, statistica­lly speaking, makes the next mass shooting even more likely. More guns means more mass shootings.

FBI data confirms this trend, with the annual rate of mass shootings increasing sharply over the past two decades. It is also worth noting that gun-related suicide is more common than gun-related homicide in the US.

Despite all the evidence indicting lax gun laws, there will still be those who point the finger at mental health. Certain sections of the media will no doubt publish psychologi­cal autopsies on the shooter. Anybody who can kill 19 unarmed, innocent elementary school children and two teachers is, by definition, not in their right mind. However, mental health problems exist everywhere; frequent mass shootings don’t.

In some instances, mental health becomes the scapegoat for lax gun laws. For instance, in the wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary school shooting in 2012, in which 27 people died, Ann Coulter, a conservati­ve commentato­r, asserted that “Guns don’t kill people – the mentally ill do.” Such provocativ­e statements are ill-founded and serve only to stigmatise mental health problems. With reference to the Robb Elementary shooting Texas Governor, Greg Abbott, said: “We as a state, we as a society, need to do a better job with mental health.”

Society has generally become more accepting of people experienci­ng mental health problems such as depression and anxiety. However, our attitudes towards people with severe and enduring mental health issues, such as psychosis/schizophre­nia, have not followed suit.

A study reported in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n last year looked at trends in US public stigma between 1996 and 2018. The authors note that public attitudes towards people diagnosed with schizophre­nia have become more negative. For example, people diagnosed with schizophre­nia were increasing­ly stereotype­d as being violent. Is this rise in stigma an unintended consequenc­e of mass shootings, and how they are framed by politician­s and the media?

The notion that people with mental health problems automatica­lly pose an elevated risk of violence to society is an enduring myth. Only a tiny minority of people with severe mental health problems commit or have the potential to commit violence towards others. Moreover, identifyin­g such at-risk individual­s is, at present, nearly impossible.

George Szmukler, emeritus professor of Psychiatry and Society at King’s College London, used sophistica­ted statistica­l analysis to predict violence among psychiatri­c patients. Unfortunat­ely, when the predictive model was used to identify those who were likely to be involved in extreme acts of violence, it was close to useless, getting it wrong 97 times out of 100. This issue of “false positives” has profound implicatio­ns for civil liberties. For example, how many non-aggressive patients is it acceptable to detain to perhaps prevent one violent incident?

Focusing on mental health in the wake of a mass shooting is a problemati­c distractio­n. Advocating for greater control over psychiatri­c patients might make us feel safer, but we won’t be safer. Instead, tighter gun control and the cultivatio­n of more compassion­ate and caring societies will help reduce the risk of such tragic incidents.

The time for decisive action (reasonable gun control) was in 2012, after child-sized coffins containing the 21 children of Sandy Hook Elementary school were being interred or incinerate­d. Ten years later feels too late, but late is better than never. I sincerely hope that this time there will be decisive action to reduce the number and type of guns in the hands of civilians in the US.

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