TY - JOUR T1 - Public, health professional and legislator perspectives on the concept of psychiatric disease: a population-based survey JF - BMJ Open JO - BMJ Open DO - 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-024265 VL - 9 IS - 6 SP - e024265 AU - Kari A O Tikkinen AU - Jarno Rutanen AU - Allen Frances AU - Brea L Perry AU - Brittany B Dennis AU - Arnav Agarwal AU - Amna Maqbool AU - Shanil Ebrahim AU - Janne S Leinonen AU - Teppo L N Järvinen AU - Gordon H Guyatt Y1 - 2019/06/01 UR - http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/9/6/e024265.abstract N2 - Objective To assess which mental health-related states of being are perceived as diseases by psychiatrists, non-psychiatric physicians, nurses, parliament members and laypeople.Design and setting A population-based, mailed survey in Finland.Participants Respondents from a random sample of 3000 laypeople, 1500 physicians, 1500 nurses and all 200 members of the parliament (MPs) of Finland.Primary outcome measures Respondents’ perspectives on 20 mental health-related states of being as diseases, measuring the extent of agreement with the claim: ‘[This state of being] is a disease’.Results Of the 6200 people approached, we received 3259 eligible responses (53%). Two conditions (schizophrenia and autism) were considered to be diseases by at least 75% and two states (grief and homosexuality) were considered not to be diseases by at least 75% in each group. A majority (at least 50% in each group) considered seven states as diseases (anorexia, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, bulimia, depression, generalised anxiety disorder, panic disorder and personality disorder) and three not to be diseases (absence of sexual desire, premature ejaculation and transsexualism). In six states, there was a wide divergence of opinion (alcoholism, drug addiction, gambling addiction, insomnia, social anxiety disorder and work exhaustion). Psychiatrists were significantly more inclined to considering states of being as diseases relative to other groups, followed by non-psychiatric physicians, nurses, MPs and laypeople.Conclusions Respondents agreed that some conditions, such as schizophrenia and autism, are diseases and other states, such as grief and homosexuality, are not; for others, there was considerable disagreement. Psychiatrists are more inclined to consider mental health-related states of being as diseases compared with other physicians, who, in turn, are more inclined than other constituencies. Understanding notions of disease may underlie important debates in public policy and practice in areas of mental health and behaviour, and have implications for resource allocation and stigma. ER -