Social contagions plague a vulnerable demographic
As rates of Covid-19 infection started to dwindle, there came
signs of a much stranger pandemic: long Covid and its host of long-term
complications. You might think that, since men and older people suffer
the most complications from the virus, most of those with long Covid would be
older men. But this is not so. According to a US Census Bureau survey, women are
almost twice as likely as men to report having it, while transgender people are
significantly more likely to do so than all other groups. A German study, meanwhile,
concluded “there is accumulating evidence that adolescent girls are at
particular risk of prolonged symptoms”.
Given that
Covid tends to affect men more than women, why would long Covid affect women
more than men? And given that Covid complications are extremely rare in the young,
why would teenage girls be disproportionately affected by long Covid? Finally,
given that we can’t accuse a virus of transphobia, why would long Covid affect
transgender people most?
The answer lies in the fact that long Covid is not a strictly physical
phenomenon. A study of
nearly two million people published in Nature found that
people who reported three or more symptoms of long Covid included: 4.9% of
people confirmed to have had Covid, and 4% of people with no evidence of having
had Covid. So, reporting the symptoms of long Covid is only moderately
associated with a prior Covid infection. In fact, long Covid correlates about
as much with mood disorders as with Covid itself. One study found that people prone to anxiety and
depression before Covid infection were 45% more likely to develop long Covid
after infection, and the Nature study found that having
anxiety and depression before getting Covid almost doubled the chances of
reporting long Covid.
This would help explain why women and trans people are
disproportionately reporting long Covid: these two demographics have
particularly high rates of anxiety and depression.
But why exactly would mood disorders increase the likelihood of long
Covid? Some experts have speculated that stress may affect
the immune system’s response to Covid and lead to more serious infections.
However, a Turkish study found no evidence that anxiety or depression alters the
body’s immune response to the virus. A much likelier explanation could be that,
since symptoms of mood disorders overlap with those of long Covid, people are
mistaking psychological distress for the side-effects of viral infection.
This is part of a broader phenomenon. Young people are reporting despair
and distress at an unprecedented rate, and this mental health crisis is a
symptom of a malfunctioning society — a society that is making people
sick, by teaching them to feel sick. The tendency for people to misdiagnose their
despair as a medical disorder can be observed far beyond reports of long Covid.
Consider the surge in cases of gender dysphoria. Between 2012 and 2022, the
number of adolescents referred to the NHS’s Gender Identity Development Service
(GIDS) increased by over 2000%. If the increase were simply due to decreasing
stigma around being trans, it wouldn’t be mostly restricted to a single sex and
age range, but it has been driven almost exclusively by young people and natal females.
The group that’s disproportionately reporting gender dysphoria —
adolescent girls — appears to be the same demographic as the group deemed in
the German study to be disproportionately at risk of long Covid. This is also
the group, besides trans people, deemed most at risk of mood disorders. So, again, it seems
many young people, particularly girls, are confusing general distress for
another illness.
And it’s not just reports of gender dysphoria that have multiplied among
young people. Increases have occurred for major depressive disorder, attention-deficit
disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, social anxiety disorder, generalised anxiety disorder, autism spectrum disorder, and various eating disorders. It seems that young people, and their
doctors, are viewing personal issues as medical disorders: we are living
through a pathologisation pandemic.
Why are so many people confusing sadness for sickness? It’s human nature
to look for single causes to complex problems. The physician’s habit of
ascribing all a patient’s symptoms to just one diagnosis led to the formulation
of Hickam’s dictum, which states: “A man can have as many diseases as he damn
well pleases.” Likewise, it’s tempting to look for a neat and simple reason for
people blaming their troubles on a single disorder, but to do this would be to
make the same mistake as them. Pathologisation can have as many causes as it
damn well pleases.
One may be cyberchondria, the phenomenon whereby people anxiously google
symptoms, and, due to confirmation bias, ignore those that don’t apply to them
while focusing on those that do, until they become convinced they have the
disorder they’re reading about. Another cause may be social contagion, whereby
panic spreads through the power of suggestion. According to a UK study, adolescents who reported parents suffering from long
Covid were almost twice as likely to report experiencing long Covid symptoms
themselves, regardless of whether they’d actually had Covid.
It’s known that social contagions tend to affect girls more
than boys, a disparity that could be exacerbated by girls tending to use social media more than boys. But the
problem with social contagion as an explanation is that it’s a how, not a why;
it offers a means without a motive.
Some have attempted to discern a motive. One is that girls are trying to
escape unattainable ideals of femininity. As the arms race of plastic surgery
and beauty filters ramps up, natural bodies seem ugly by comparison. This
“selfie dysmorphia” may lead to anxiety and depression, as well as symptoms of
gender dysphoria, as pubescent girls become desperate to defy the metamorphosis
of their bodies into sexual objects. But this explanation doesn’t shed much
light on the rise of conditions like long Covid, autism, and
obsessive-compulsive disorder. However, a deeper dive into the data does.
When we include politics in the mental health data, it becomes clear
that this isn’t simply about gender. A 2020 Pew survey of over 10,000 people found that self-described
liberals aged 18-29 were more likely than self-described conservatives of the
same age to report suffering psychological problems over the last week. They
were also more than twice as likely to say they’d ever been diagnosed with a
mental health disorder. Furthermore, those who were “very liberal” were more
likely than those who were just “liberal” to report poor mental health. The
group most likely to report poor mental health was white liberal females, an
alarming 56% of whom reported having received a mental illness diagnosis.
Crucially, controlling for worldview narrowed the gender gap
considerably: liberal men were more likely to report poor mental health than
conservative women. It would seem, then, that the mental health epidemic among
girls and young women is associated with their tendency to have a more Left-liberal mindset than boys and young men — a
difference that’s becoming more pronounced over time.
But why would Leftism be associated with poorer mental health? An analysis of data from 86,138 adolescents found, in
line with the Pew survey, that between 2005 and 2018 the self-reported mental
health of liberals had deteriorated more than conservatives’, and that this
deterioration was worst for girls. The researchers blamed this on “alienation
within a growing conservative political climate”. However, the New York
Times’ Michelle Goldberg debunked this explanation by pointing out that
liberals’ mental health woes began while Obama was in power and as the Supreme
Court voted to extend gay marriage rights — hardly a conservative political
climate.
The real reasons may be deeper. One idea, more than any other, underpins
the difference in outlook between liberals and conservatives. Central to
Leftism is equality, backed by the idea that people’s fortunes and misfortunes
are not their own doing, and therefore undeserved. As such, Leftism de-emphasises
the role of human agency in social outcomes, while overemphasising the role of
environmental circumstances. As the West has shifted culturally Leftward — due
to most writers and artists leaning Left — the depiction of people as hapless
puppets has become dominant.
Today’s Left-liberal culture teaches young people that their problems
are not their own fault, but rather the product of various systems beyond their
control. These systems may be sociological — late capitalism, systemic racism,
the patriarchy — but increasingly, they are medical. A common example is
“trauma”, a psychiatric term that has become a knee-jerk justification for
everything from street crime to silencing opposing views on campus. It’s a word
so overused that even clinicians fear it has lost its meaning. Most people, however,
are happy to have their personal failings blamed on medical issues, because it
absolves them of responsibility. It’s not your fault you violently lashed out,
you have trauma. It’s not your fault you lack energy, you have long Covid. It’s
not your fault you hate the way you look, you have gender dysphoria.
Pathologisation is also an effective way to manufacture sympathy. The
co-founder of Black Lives Matter, Patrisse Cullors, responded to accusations she’d used donation money to
enrich friends and family by claiming that the accusations had given her
post-traumatic stress disorder, a diagnosis once reserved for rape survivors
and war veterans.
Claims like Cullors’s are instinctively met with sympathy and even awe
on the Left, where overeager attempts to destigmatise mental illness can end up
glamorising it. On social media, young liberals now engage in “sadfishing”, a
kind of digital Munchausen’s Syndrome, where people fabricate ailments for pity
and clout; some, such as the TikToker “TicsAndRoses”,
fake Tourette’s, while others fake multiple personalities. The power of
mental health disorders to attract attention online has turned them into
fashion accessories, cute quirks to help kids stand out from the crowd,
or “part of my dating appeal”.
Unfortunately, these designer disorders are not just harmless labels;
intentional pathologisation by influencers is causing unintentional pathologisation
among viewers. Reports tell of adolescent girls suddenly developing
“TikTok tics” after viewing videos of alleged Tourette’s sufferers. Others tell of adolescents presenting with multiple
personalities after watching videos of people claiming to have dissociative
identity disorder. As atomisation makes people more desperate for sympathy, and
competition makes them more desperate for attention, it’s likely that
sadfishing and its consequences will only worsen.
But as disturbing as all this is, victimhood culture is not the only
force behind the pathologisation pandemic. It’s been abetted by a medical
industry that has its own incentives for exaggerating the prevalence of mental
disorders.
Medicalisation — the tendency for clinicians to recategorise ever more
things as medical issues — occurs because clinicians are just as human as their
patients, and are therefore just as influenced by culture and their own
personal biases. The 1973 Rosenhan experiment showed that psychiatrists who have
been told that a healthy person is insane will begin to reinterpret that
person’s ordinary behaviours, such as note-taking, as manifestations of their
mental disorder. We saw this in the Tavistock scandal, where the staff of the
infamous Gids clinic, conditioned by ideologues to look for gender dysphoria,
became increasingly hasty to diagnose it.
The ability of clinicians to see precisely the symptoms they’re looking
for is facilitated by concept
creep, the tendency for the definitions of disorders to gradually expand to
encompass more people. The rise in autism diagnoses, for instance, can be largely attributed to a diagnostic widening of the
autism spectrum. Concept creep occurs largely due to the Shirky principle,
which states: “Institutions will try to preserve the problems to which they are
the solution.” The motive is often financial; the number of pregnancies deemed
to require caesarean sections has increased because this method of delivering
babies is more profitable. Likewise, if you’re simply sad then
medical companies can’t monetise you, but if your distress is reclassified as,
say, gender dysphoria, those companies can sell you puberty blockers or
surgical procedures. By 2021, GIDS accounted for a quarter of
the Tavistock trust’s income. In the States, the sex reassignment surgery
market was valued at $1.9 billion and is projected to have a
lucrative annual growth rate of 11.23%.
So, we have a medical industry that is both financially and
ideologically motivated to overstate the prevalence of illness, and we have a
victimhood culture that encourages people to view themselves as oppressed by
things they can’t control. In the middle of this we have ordinary people
tempted to blame their problems on medical issues for the sake of easy answers.
These three entities together form a mutually reinforcing system. The
late philosopher Ian Hacking, in his book Rewriting the Soul,
details how in the 20th century, the press, the public, and the medical
industry operated in tandem to create new forms of madness out of mere gossip.
Prior to 1970, there were almost no cases of multiple personality disorder (now
known as dissociative identity disorder), but after one case was
well-publicised by the media, people began using the concept of multiple
personalities to make sense of their own problems. In so doing, they began to
conform, wittingly or otherwise, to the official symptoms of the disorder. When
clinicians speculated that people may invent multiple personalities to deal
with childhood sexual abuse, people began to do just that. Some even suddenly
“remembered” being sexually abused, even though the concept of repressed
memories has no basis in fact. Initially, patients reported having two or three
personalities. Within a decade, the average number was 17.
Thus, patient reports influenced clinicians’ diagnoses, but clinicians’
diagnoses also influenced patient reports. Diagnostic criteria became
prescriptive as well as descriptive; they told patients how they were supposed
to feel and act. Hacking called this cycle of mutual reinforcement a “looping
effect”, and it proved so powerful that it turned a couple of isolated cases
into an epidemic. A similar looping effect, facilitated by a hyperconnected
world, seems to be driving the rise in reports of mental illness today.
This is a problem because imagined sickness can cause real sickness.
This occurs in two ways. The first is direct: in rural India, folklore tells
that being bitten by a pregnant dog can make one pregnant with the dog’s
puppies, and this urban myth has created a new illness: puppy pregnancy
syndrome. Victims become so convinced they’re pregnant with puppies that they
suffer panic attacks and even manifest symptoms of pregnancy, from persistent
nausea to the sensation of puppies crawling in their bellies.
But the second way fake sickness becomes real is far more common and
insidious.
Remember how Leftism de-emphasises human agency in the name of
equality? Research shows conservatives tend to have an internal
locus of control, which means they believe that their decisions, as opposed to
external forces, control their destiny. Liberals, meanwhile, tend to have an
external locus, which means they believe their lives are determined by forces
beyond their control.
The American psychologists Jonathan Haidt and Jean Twenge used
national survey data of adolescents to map their locus of
control. Their findings were based on the proportion of respondents who agreed
with statements such as: “People like me don’t have a chance at a successful
life” and “Whenever I try to get ahead, something stops me”. They concluded
that, since the Nineties, the locus of control for all teenagers has become more external, but the shift has been greater for
liberals, and greatest for liberal girls. Further, when the self-worth of
teenagers was mapped, using responses to statements such as “I feel my life is
not very useful”, the data showed a universal decline in self-worth since 2012.
Again, the decline was stronger for liberals, and strongest for liberal girls.
People with an internal locus of control, believing they control their
destiny, tend to be happier and
have healthier
habits, like good diets and frequent exercise, while people with an
external locus of control, believing they’re at the mercy of fate, have higher rates of anxiety and depression and are more likely to abuse drugs and neglect their health.
When you believe you have no control, you don’t.
And thus, as society has liberalised, and medicalised, young people have
lost both self-belief and resilience. Many have subsequently become trapped in
a cycle where they feel distress, and pathologise it, causing more distress,
leading to more pathologisation and more distress, which eventually becomes
textbook anxiety and depression. The rise in diagnoses is therefore not simply
an illusion caused by medicalisation; society is teaching kids to develop real
dysfunctions.
This is the greatest danger of the pathologisation pandemic: belief in
one’s sickness is self-fulfilling. It’s a disease not of any bodily organ but
of hope itself, and it harms its victim by crippling their immunity to
everything else.
If there’s a vaccine for the pathologisation pandemic, then the best
candidate is Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT). This is a form of talk-based
treatment based on the Ancient Greek philosophy of Stoicism. Contrary to
modernity, it teaches that our feelings are not always valid, but often deluded
and self-destructive. The aim is to reframe harmful thoughts into alternatives
that are more accurate, agentic, and soluble. So, instead of “The world sucks”,
one could think “I feel like the world sucks right now”. Where pathologisation
places problems outside your control, CBT places them within your control.
Where pathologisation bundles many small issues into one giant insurmountable
problem, CBT breaks down giant problems into small manageable pieces.
No form of psychotherapy has been as rigorously tested as CBT, and its
effectiveness in restoring agency and reigniting hope is documented by decades of research.
Some studies suggest CBT is gradually losing effectiveness,
but this is mostly because CBT, like everything else in the social sciences,
has been corrupted by amateurisation and the desire to be “inclusive” and
inoffensive. The newest forms of CBT, such as “Transgender-Affirmative CBT”,
are the opposite of classic CBT because they seek not to cultivate strength but
to validate feelings.
More than ever, a return is needed to the original, Stoicism-based form
of CBT, which has helped everyone from the philosopher-emperor Marcus Aurelius,
who governed Rome during a time of war and plague, to Vietnam POW James
Stockdale, who used it to withstand torture at the notorious “Hanoi Hilton”.
The ultimate cure to rampant pathologisation is to prepare the young to do
battle against their greatest foe — their own minds — and to teach them a
time-tested truth, bequeathed to us by history’s survivors: you are more than
the things that happen to you. And you have as much control over your life as
you believe you do.
Many of the misfortunes that befall you will not be your fault, but if
you seek explanations for your suffering in things beyond your control, you
risk falling prey to a culture and industry that are motivated to keep you
feeling ill. Look within for the causes and, most times, you’ll find the cures.
Modern society will tell you otherwise, of course, but it’s within your power
to defy it, for you are not a helpless leaf in the wind but a mind that holds a
world, which, depending on how you think, could be a Hell in Heaven, or a
Heaven in Hell.
Is liberal society making us ill? - UnHerd
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