Alexithymia is a broad term to describe problems with feeling emotions. The authors claim:
What if I told you there was a condition that:
- severely affects every 1 in 10 people, and up to 50% of people with a diagnosed mental disorder
- negatively affects numerous aspects of physical health, mental wellness, general well-being, and quality of life
- was studied for over 50 years with over 5000 published scientific papers on the topic
So Alexithymia is a potentially common condition that significantly increases the likelihood of mental health problems. Further, the inability to perceive emotions a priori is likely to contribute to mental health issues.
Although the authors do not assess the effectiveness of existing solutions, it seems plausible that effective treatments could be developed. A few reasons for optimism:
- Unlike traditional mental health, where evaluation criteria are self-reported, in the case of alexithymia, better proxies might be built based on facial expressions.
- Gendlin Focusing technique (and related things) have been found useful in this and adjacent communities.
Since Alexithymia is mentioned only once on the EA Forum, it might be overlooked by mental health-focused organizations. Given the abundance of scientific literature on the topic, it could be worthwhile to do an evaluation.
AFAIK, the authors are currently fundraising to develop the animiapp.com
(From an email.) Some questions I am interested in:
What's the size of alexithymia (A)?
Does it actually make MH issues more likely or more severe? This mashes a few plausible claims and needs to be disentangled carefully, e.g., (a) given A, does MH more likely to be developed in the first place; (b) given MH, will A (even if acquired as a result of MH) make MH issues last longer or be worse? A neat casual model might be helpful here, separating A acquired with MH vs. A pre-existing to MH.
How treatable is A? Does treating A improves MH? Is there any research (esp. RCT) on this? Does this depends on subgroups, e.g., A acquired with MH vs. A pre-existing to MH vs. A without MH…
How would treating A fit into the MH treatment landscape? Can it be integrated with ongoing MH efforts in general (like people generally seeing therapy or doing CBT with a book or an app)? Can it be integrated with existing seemingly effective solutions (e.g., https://www.charityentrepreneurship.com/our-charities incubated MH orgs or charities recommended by https://www.happierlivesinstitute.org/)?
Sorry for the late reply, I didn't have notifications for comments enabled.
1. It is estimated that 10% of the population is in the clinical cutoff range where it is pathological, so 800M people in the world. It might seem like a lot, but if you look at how prevalent it is in various mental disorder populations, it suddenly makes a lot of sense. In short, up to ~50% of people with a mental disorder diagnosis are also alexithymic.
- Psychosomatic disorders → 40%−60%
- Anxiety disorders → 13%−58%
- Depressive disorders → 32%−51%
- Eating disorders → 24%−77%
- Addictiv
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