self-harm, 28%. mood disorders, 23%. anxiety disorders, 10.4%, and disruptive or impulse control disorders, 9.7%. so you mentioned social media as a factor, but again, because this was pre-pandemic, quickly i want to hear what you think is behind all of this and then move on to another question. i think i think what s behind it is the idea that we don t have enough caretakers around. you go to the emergency room, you are not doing that well. someone in the emergency room gives you a medication or a shot of something. you go home. well, when you are not doing well again, do you have follow-up, is there a doctor you are seeing, a therapist. it s about kids and teens bouncing from e.r. to home to e.r. it s an absolute indictment on the lack of mental health providers in this country. anita: so sad, and quickly, about 30 seconds. looking at these numbers from
individuals, whether it s a profession that does so, and maybe academic institutions that don t come forward and say well look, this happened in this way, and transfer, they have to and therefore, there have to be the most severe consequences. people can go through years, even decades, besieged with impulse control disorders, even committing horrific acts of violence and not receive ongoing psychiatric care mandated by the courts. that s probably the lesson here. when people are violent once, they may well be again. we don t know when. and they need constant sometimes decades-long intense super supervision. megyn: the police department is doing a mea culpa for not looking into that shooting of the brother, because they say it was an accident, but the woman had fired the shotgun three times, she shot the brother, then went out on the road, hiding behind a building, now they can t find the paperwork but say they re going to reopen it. do you think there s a