President Trump in the Oval Office. (photo: AP)
17 August 17
readersupportednews.org
There is also a bill aimed at establishing a “commission on presidential capacity”
hree
congressional Democrats have asked a psychiatrist at Yale School of
Medicine to consult with them about forming an expert panel to offer the
legislators advice on assessing President Trump’s mental health.
Yale’s Dr. Bandy Lee told STAT that over the last few
weeks members of Congress or their staff have asked her to discuss how
members might convene psychiatrists, psychologists, and other mental
health professionals “to review the president’s mental health, and
review it on a periodic basis.” The closed meeting is expected to take
place in September, she said.
The request came from three current congressmen and
one former member, she said. She declined to name them, saying they told
her they did not wish to be publicly identified yet.
The invitation comes as 27 representatives, all Democrats, have co-sponsored a bill to establish “a commission on presidential capacity.” The commission would carry out a provision of the 25th Amendment,
which gives Congress the authority to establish “a body” with the power
to declare a president “unable to discharge the powers and duties of
his office.” Under the bill, H.R. 1987, eight of the 11 members of the
commission would be physicians, including four psychiatrists.
STAT contacted the sponsors’ offices, which either did not respond or declined to comment.
Trump has not released his medical records beyond a brief summary from his physician last year. He has said he never sought or received a mental health evaluation or therapy.
But since his election and, increasingly, his
inauguration, a number of mental health experts have spoken or written
about what Trump’s behavior and speech suggest about his cognitive and
emotional status, including impulsivity and paranoia, with some offering
formal diagnoses, such as narcissistic personality disorder.
In a book
scheduled for publication in October that was edited by Lee, 27 experts
offer their views of what Lee calls “Trump’s mental symptoms,”
including his impulsivity, “extreme present focus,” pathological levels
of narcissism, and an apparent lack of trust that is a sign of deep
paranoia. The book is based on a small meeting Lee organized at Yale in
April on whether psychiatrists have a “duty to warn” about any dangers
Trump poses because of his psychological make-up.
If members of Congress form an expert panel like the
one Lee has been asked to advise on, psychiatrists who participate would
be at risk of violating a decades-old ethics rule imposed by the
American Psychiatric Association on its members. Called the Goldwater
rule, it prohibits APA members from diagnosing the mental health of
public figures whom they have not examined. (Sharing such a diagnosis of
someone they have examined would, of course, violate a different
ethical rule, on patient confidentiality.)
In March, after growing criticism that the Goldwater
rule was essentially a gag order that prevented the public from hearing
from experts, the APA not only reaffirmed the rule but extended it. Now,
in addition to the prohibition against suggesting that someone might
(or might not) have a specific mental disorder, APA members are barred
from “render[ing] an opinion about the affect, behavior, speech, or
other presentation of an individual that draws on the skills, training,
expertise, and/or knowledge inherent in the practice of psychiatry.”
While there is an exception for court-ordered
evaluations and for consultations even without personally evaluating
someone, there is no explicit exception allowing psychiatrists to tell
elected officials, in public or in private, their views of a public
figure’s mental state. Last month, the American Psychoanalytic
Association, another psychiatrists group, sent an email to its members reiterating that they are not bound by the APA’s rule.
Lee, whose academic research focuses on prison reform, recidivism, and the causes of violence,
said she “kept with the Goldwater rule’s original conception of
refraining from making diagnoses, but speaking to dangerousness and the
need for an evaluation.”
The expert panel that Lee was asked to discuss
convening would have several members, she said, but it remains to be
worked out who would serve, how and by whom they would be chosen, what
their mandate would be, and how and when they would offer their opinions
to Congress, should the proposal even get off the ground.
On Friday, Lee and four other psychiatrists sent a
letter to all members of the U.S. Senate and House arguing that Trump
exhibits “severe emotional impediments that … present a grave threat to
international security,” and asking Congress to “take immediate steps to
establish a commission to determine his fitness for office.” The letter
signers are staunch Trump opponents and believe his presidency should
end.
The letter echoed one
that Lee and a slightly different group of colleagues sent to Congress
in July. The most recent one came in the wake of Trump’s reportedly
ad-libbed statement last Tuesday that if North Korea carries through on
its nuclear threats, “they will be met with fire and fury and frankly
power the likes of which this world has never seen before.” On Thursday,
after North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un threatened to bomb the American
territory of Guam, Trump said, “Maybe that statement wasn’t tough
enough.”
Lee and the other signers of the new letter, including
Dr. Lance Dodes, recently retired from Harvard Medical School, argue
that Trump’s “alarming patterns of impulsive, reckless, and narcissistic
behavior — regardless of diagnosis … put the world at risk,” posing an
“imminent danger” that psychiatrists are ethically obligated to warn
about.
“The role of honor or, rather, perceived humiliation
is often overlooked as a powerful stimulant of international violence,”
they write, adding that the “president may not have the capacity to
consider an array of possible choices, due to his own emotional needs.”
They ask Congress to “take immediate steps to establish a commission to
determine his fitness for office.”
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