| Improvement is in treating. Don't false equivocate. If we were to open more mines than there were in 1900 we may well see more broken legs. However we're far better at treating a broken leg. Though it is not at all clear that "mental health" is deteriorating. It may be that some forms of mental health issues are more prevalent today (eg. anxiety and depression). But that is no where near the whole picture. An entire generation of people were traumatized by WW1 and WW2, and by the generation of parents who through that traumatization, traumatized their children. Extreme disorders of the personality, PTSD, etc. simply were seen as normal then because they were so overwhelmingly common. PTSD didnt exist as a diagnosis till 70s, and yet it would characterize a generation of people under war. If I were to speculate, I would say that we are overwhelmingly better in our general mental health. That we recognise it as an issue suggest a profound advancement. |
By what measure? Because I just posted a bunch of studies that show the opposite, and they actually address a lot of the issues you brought up.