For the record...
Aug. 20th, 2004 04:58 pmApparently I am not as clear a writer as I hoped I was. I do not know how people are getting the idea that I think MIT should be dumbed down. Nor am I suggesting that students should be coddled and babied. My points are twofold. Let me spell them out in black and white (or purple, as the case may be in my LJ):
- Refusing someone a position they are qualified for on no basis other than the fact that they have issues with mental health such as antidepressants or therapy is discrimination, pure and simple.
- Institutions that provide physical health care (such as employers and universities) should have a moral, ethical, and in my opinion legal obligation to provide mental health care as well.
I would like to add, though this is more of an opinion than a firm belief, that the high-stress pressure-cooker environment so prevalent in our society, especially at the top universities and pretty much any sector that is high-powered, does little to increase productivity or knowledge, probably contributes to the sort of mental problems that cost billions each year in lost productivity, and to boot turns people into insufferable raging assholes.
EDIT:
Yeah...
Date: 2004-08-20 02:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-08-20 02:13 pm (UTC)Tangential
Date: 2004-08-20 02:16 pm (UTC)I'm speaking about the types of kids who can afford to go to MIT. I know not all kids today are like that. And not even all kids that can afford to go to MIT. But when you buy a child an $80k car for their Sweet Sixteen, you are not exactly preparing them for life in the Real World. When you give a child every single thing their grubby little hands seek out without making them earn it, you are not preparing them for the fact that sometimes, you don't/can't get everything you want without any effort. When you focus your entire life on pleasing your child and protecting them from every harsh word, disappointment, and dust mite that is out there, you are not preparing them for the fact that they might fail. Schools that no longer allow field day competitions because not every child can win and they don't want the children to feel bad about themselves is not preparing these children for mistakes or failure. School systems that promote failing children because they don't want to damage their self-esteem are not preparing these children for the fact that they will be unable to cope with the demands of the real world.
I'm pro-mental health and pro-medication, but frankly, unless they are blatantly rejecting people based on mental health problems, MIT has nothing to apologize for other than being insensitive. They should provide the basic care that any university would provide. It is not the university's job to clean up and fund the quivering wreck that the kids' parents have created.
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Date: 2004-08-20 02:21 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2004-08-20 02:23 pm (UTC)There are certain jobs where psychiatric history is considered important. For any job involving national security, a psychiatric history or taking psychoactive medication is considered a liability, even if it's no longer current.
I think the problem comes from the gray realm of defining "qualified" and how fuzzy it becomes in the realm of mental health and how it affects functional capacity.
After all, should a psychiatric history that includes in overly aggressive tendencies be considered a disqualifying factor for say, a police officer? What if there is no psychiatric history, but simply in the course of the interview, the interviewer feels that the candidate is overly aggressive and confrontational and lacks personal skills?
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Date: 2004-08-20 02:23 pm (UTC)There are certainly schools you can get through solely by being a spoiled rich kid, but I don't really think MIT is one of them.
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Date: 2004-08-20 02:35 pm (UTC)Out of curiosity I poked around MIT's webpages and it turns out that they don't have a psychology department. They do have a "brain and cognative sciences" department, but it has more of a neuroscience/AI focus rather than anything to do with traditional psychology/psychiatry. Might partly explain the ignorance shown.
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Date: 2004-08-20 02:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-08-20 04:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-08-20 05:28 pm (UTC)I think universities should have mental health care treatment solutions for students, mainly for the reason that until they get to the university, they may not have demonstrated any symptoms of any mental illness that prohibits them from being successful in school. Note that there are mental illnesses that are conducive to academic success: control freaks, obsessive compulsives can flourish, anal retentive folks could, too.
But if a student has demonstrated a historical unreliability in maintaining treatment of a disorder that would be counterproductive to his/her academic career, that should be a factor. At places like MIT, you go there for the intensity of it all--to be the best. If you have been unable to maintain your particular mental illness such that you want to kill yourself every so often under the pressure, its not going to be any easier for you at MIT.
The other option is that if a student has a bad mental history, and still wants to subject themselves to MIT's environment, then they should sign a waiver (or their parents), that they will not hold MIT responsible for said student committing suicide.
This is such a hard issue, and I don't think I'm doing justice in expressing my thoughts. Some other thoughts:
1.I don't think students should be excluded from attending a university because of their mental disability/illness, but they need accept some responsibility for it or compensate for it.
2. Universities should have some services available to funnel students who need mental health assistance to the right channels. Sometimes this isn't even a good solution, either, because most people who go into the mental health profession can be nuts, too. And will all mentally ill people who need the care seek it out? What if the person doesn't keep track of their medication properly, and goes out of control. Or, like a friend of mine, what if the student knows they have a mental illness, but refuses to take the medication because they don't like the side-effects?
3. I don't think the University/Organization should be held responsible for stress-induced suicides when they make it more than clear that the environment is extremely stressful. There is a price for such success (unless you're a Bush family member, then we pay the price for their success).
no subject
Date: 2004-08-20 09:49 pm (UTC)Okay, I'll stop gloating.
The job I have now is great. My boss protects me from all of these idiots. I took it for granted in the 90's, but now I think it's amazing. I've only been back at Thomas Concrete for a week, and I'm amazed by the low level of stress. I just hope the shock doesn't bring on a heart attack before I have time to relax.