Living With Schizoaffective Disorder
Someone You Know is Mentally Ill
One out of three people is mentally ill. Ask two friends how
they're doing. If they say they're OK, then you're it.
Mental illness is common in the entire world's population. However many
people are unaware of the mentally ill who live among them because the
stigma against mental illness forces those who suffer to keep it hidden.
Many people who ought to be aware of it prefer to pretend it doesn't exist.
The most common mental illness is depression. It is so common that many
are surprised to find out that it is considered a mental illness at all.
About 25% of women and 12% of men experience depression at some time in
their lives, and at any given moment about 5% are experiencing major
depression. (The statistics I find vary depending on the source.)
Roughly 1.2% of the population is manic-depressive. You probably know
more than a hundred people - the chances are great that you know someone who
is manic-depressive. Or to look at it another way, according to K5's
advertising demographics, our community has 27,000 registered users and
is visited by 200,000 unique visitors each month. Thus we can expect that K5
has roughly 270 manic-depressive members and the site is viewed by about
2,000 manic-depressive readers each month.
A slightly smaller number
of people have schizophrenia.
About one in two hundred people get
schizoaffective disorder during their lives.
More statistics can be found in
The
Numbers Count.
While homelessness is a significant problem for the mentally ill, most of
us are not out sleeping on the streets or locked up in hospitals. Instead we
live and work in society just as you do. You will find the mentally ill
among your friends, neighbors, coworkers, classmates, even your family. At a
company where I was once employed, when I confided that I was
manic-depressive to a coworker in our small workgroup, she replied that she
was manic-depressive too.
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