进一步证明蓝斑在痴呆的发病机制中的作用。

Elizabeta Blagoja Mukaetova-Ladinska, Joern Steinert, John Maltby, Golo Kronenberg
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Further evidence for a role for the locus coeruleus in the aetiopathogenesis of dementia.
Bebbington & McManus are to be thanked and congratulated for keeping this important and popular, but slippery, statistic under regular review and close-examination. Their summary is likely to lead most readers to continue using the now well-known and oftquoted ‘1 in 4’ headline statistic for the overall prevalence of psychiatric disorders. They also rightly point out the twin dangers of overand under-egging the statistic, risking lack of credibility and lack of impact, respectively. However, I would suggest that the data presented comfortably allows for a new, revised ‘1 in 3’ headline. This would not be overstating the case, but would simply accurately describe their findings. Their current ‘1 in 4’ summary headline explicitly excludes ‘personality and other disorders’, as well as ‘substance use disorders’ and ‘developmental disorders’ ...including them takes the true statistic to (very nearly) ‘1 in 3’ (31.6%, to be precise). There is now a long history of evidence and campaigning to have personality disorders recognised as ‘bona-fide’ mental disorders, with services developed and provided to match. Calls range from the 2003 National Institute for Mental Health in England ‘Personality Disorder: no longer a diagnosis of exclusion’, through to the more recent 2018 consensus statement on personality disorder and the freshly released 2020 Royal College of Psychiatrists Position statement, ‘Services for People Diagnosable with Personality Disorder’. They have always been in the ICD10. Similar arguments and evidence could be made (ethically, on the grounds of stigma/parity, and scientifically) for the inclusion of the substance use disorders and developmental disorders that bring the final statistic to 1 in 3. Presenting a new ‘1 in 3’ headline would not be over-egging the evidence, but simply presenting the full findings of carefully conducted up-to-date research, thus promoting accurate, evidencebased societal perceptions of mental disorder, and subsequent policy decision-making. This is especially important given the limited traction so far gained in closing the gap between rhetoric and action with regard to ‘parity of esteem for mental health’. The NHS Long Term Plan for Mental Health carries the potential for hope, but nothing should be taken for granted until it materialises. In the meantime, we should advocate not excluding people with personality disorder (or substance use and developmental disorders) from the headline statistics generated by good-quality research; statistical parity of esteem for all those with mental disorders would justify a new, revised, evidence-based and accurate ‘1 in 3’ summary headline, which would be neither under-egged, nor over-egged, but ‘just(-ly) right’.
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