Mental illness is a disease that neutralizes the human brain and changes people's thoughts and emotions. Mental disorders are common in the United States and around the world. According to the National Institute of Mental Health (Statistics, page 1), an estimated 26.2% of Americans over the age of 18 suffer from a mental disorder that can be diagnosed within a certain year. One in four adults. Many people face the problem of mental illness without proper diagnosis. It is worth noting that psychosis affects relationships between parents, children, brothers and sisters, friends, and ultimately the entire society.
Several abstracts: Child trauma is an important risk factor for severe psychiatric disorders Meta-analysis is diagnosed as severe mental illness in adults than in people without disease, with traumatic trauma history It shows that the possibility is 3 times higher. The cause-and-effect problem is still under investigation. Dose response relationships and event sequencing strongly suggest causality but are not deterministic. Studies controlling genetic factors have found that trauma to children poses a significant additional risk. A plausible explanation is the partial genetic mediation of the effects of trauma on the onset of severe mental illness.
According to a new study published at the Journal of the American Medical Association, the answer should be "yes". It shows how the influence of childhood trauma persists and is related to adult psychosis and poisoning. Researchers say that this suggests that treating trauma as a public health crisis may be more effective than limiting individual treatment. William Copland, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Vermont, says that there are other similar studies in this study. Researchers did not rely on collected children's trauma reports, analyzed the data collected when the participants were children, their experience was fresh. Researchers apply strict statistical analysis to eliminate confounding factors