Mental illness denial or mental disorder denial is a form of denialism in which a person or group denies the existence of mental disorders.[1] Both serious analysts[2][3] and pseudoscientific movements[1] may question the existence of certain disorders.
A minority of professional researchers see disorders such as depression from a sociocultural perspective and argue that solutions should be sought through fixing a dysfunction in the society, not in the sufferer's brain.[3]
In psychiatry, insight is the ability of an individual to understand their mental health,[4] and anosognosia is a condition caused by brain damage where the person becomes cognitively unaware, whether partially or completely, of their impairment.[5]
Certain psychological analysts argue this denialism is a coping mechanism usually fueled by narcissistic injury.[6] According to Elyn Saks, probing patient's denial may lead to better ways to help them overcome their denial and provide insight into other issues.[6] Major reasons for denial are narcissistic injury and denialism.[6] In denialism, a person tries to deny psychologically uncomfortable truth and tries to rationalize it.[6] This urge for denialism is fueled further by narcissistic injury.[6]Narcissism gets injured when a person feels vulnerable (or weak or overwhelmed) for some reason like mental illness.[6]
Scholarly criticism of psychiatric diagnosis
Scholars have criticized mental health diagnoses as arbitrary.[7] According to Thomas Szasz, mental illness is a social construct. He views psychiatry as a social control and mechanism for political oppression.[8] Szasz wrote a book on the subject in 1961, The Myth of Mental Illness.[9]
↑ 6.06.16.26.36.46.5Saks, Elyn R. "Some thoughts on denial of mental illness." American Journal of Psychiatry 166.9 (2009): 972-973. Web. 11 Dec. 2021
↑Paris, Joel (2020). Overdiagnosis in psychiatry how modern psychiatry lost its way while creating a diagnosis for almost all of life's misfortunes (Second ed.). New York, NY. ISBN978-0-19-750430-7. OCLC1147940363.