Objective: To conduct a critical review of the literature on the matter of
mental illness and violence, to examine whether there is enough evidence to
establish a casual link, and to provide epidemiological background to meas
ure the risk to the population.
Method: Based on a computerized search of the literature on mental illness
and violence previously conducted for Health Canada, studies in the area we
re critically reviewed and divided into 3 main categories: 1) studies of cr
iminal and violent behaviour among psychiatric patients, 2) studies of psyc
hiatric illness among offenders (prevalence studies in institutions, analyt
ical studies, and community follow-up of offenders), and 3) epidemiological
community-based studies on the issue of mental illness and violence (polic
e-citizen encounters, representative samples, and other epidemiological stu
dies). Causality rules and measures of risk were then applied to the eviden
ce elicited.
Results: The review of the literature suggests that only a small minority o
f hospitalized patients, typically those suffering from acute psychotic sym
ptoms, are involved in violent incidents. Formerly hospitalized patients ar
e at a higher risk of committing violence if they are not properly treated
and are experiencing threat/control-override psychotic symptoms. Substance
abuse disorders significantly raise the risk of violence. Family members ar
e the most at risk of being victimized.
Conclusion: An association exists between mental illness and violence, but
the many covariations that naturally affect the equation between them intro
duce uncertainties in establishing causality.