Thursday, 23 April 2026

Mental Health vs Mental Illness

 


Key Message

Mental health and mental illness are not the same thing.

👉 The main difference is:

  • Mental health = everyone has it
  • Mental illness = a diagnosable condition some people have

What Is Mental Health?

Mental health is:

  • A person’s emotional, psychological, and social well-being

It affects how we:

  • Think
  • Feel
  • Act
  • Relate to others

Mental Health Is a Spectrum

Mental health exists on a continuum, meaning it can change:

  • Good mental wellbeing
  • Average mental wellbeing
  • Poor mental wellbeing

👉 It is not fixed and can change over time.


Everyone Has Mental Health

  • All people have mental health
  • It is always present, just like physical health

Good Mental Health Includes:

  • Coping with stress
  • Enjoying life
  • Maintaining relationships
  • Feeling emotionally balanced

What Is Mental Illness?

Mental illness refers to:

  • Diagnosable medical conditions
  • That affect mood, thinking, and behaviour

Examples include:

  • Depression
  • Anxiety disorder
  • Schizophrenia

Impact of Mental Illness

Mental illness can:

  • Disrupt daily life
  • Affect work or education
  • Impact relationships
  • Make everyday tasks difficult

Treatment and Support

Mental illness often requires:

  • Therapy or counselling
  • Medication (in some cases)
  • Professional support

👉 It is:

  • A medical condition, not a personal weakness

Key Differences

1. Definition

  • Mental health → overall emotional wellbeing
  • Mental illness → specific diagnosable condition

2. Who It Affects

  • Mental health → everyone
  • Mental illness → some people

3. Nature

  • Mental health → constantly changing state
  • Mental illness → persistent condition (may be long-term or episodic)

4. Impact

  • Mental health:
    • Can range from positive to poor wellbeing
  • Mental illness:
    • Usually causes significant distress or impairment

Important Understanding

👉 You can:

  • Have poor mental health without having a mental illness
    (e.g. stress, grief, burnout)
  • Have a mental illness and still experience good mental health at times
    (especially with support and treatment)

Self-Care vs Treatment

  • Mental health → supported by:
    • Sleep
    • Exercise
    • Relationships
    • Self-care
  • Mental illness → may require:
    • Clinical treatment
    • Therapy
    • Medication

Why This Difference Matters

Understanding the difference helps to:

  • Reduce stigma
  • Improve support
  • Encourage early help-seeking
  • Avoid misunderstanding distress

Simple Summary (Easy Read Style)

  • Mental health is something everyone has
  • It is how we think, feel, and cope
  • Mental health can go up or down
  • Mental illness is a medical condition
  • It can affect daily life
  • It may need treatment and support
  • A person can have both good and poor mental health at different times

Powerful Insight for Your Book

👉 “Mental health is part of everyone’s life — mental illness is one part of health, not the whole story.”

Learning Disability vs Learning Difficulty

 


Key Message

Although the terms sound similar, they mean different things.

👉 The difference mainly relates to:

  • Intelligence (IQ)
  • Level of support needed
  • Impact on daily life

What Is a Learning Disability?

A learning disability:

  • Affects overall intellectual ability
  • Impacts:
    • Understanding
    • Communication
    • Everyday life skills

👉 It is:

  • Lifelong
  • Often requires ongoing support

Examples of Learning Disabilities

  • Down syndrome
  • Profound and multiple learning disabilities (PMLD)

What Is a Learning Difficulty?

A learning difficulty:

  • Affects specific areas of learning only
  • Does not affect general intelligence

👉 The person:

  • Usually has average or above-average intelligence
  • Has difficulty with particular skills

Examples of Learning Difficulties

  • Dyslexia – reading and spelling
  • Dyscalculia – maths
  • Dyspraxia – coordination
  • Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder – attention and focus

Main Differences

1. Intellectual Ability

  • Learning disability
    • Affects overall cognitive ability
    • Often associated with lower IQ (below 70)
  • Learning difficulty
    • Does not affect intelligence
    • Person has the ability to learn but needs different strategies

2. Impact on Daily Life

  • Learning disability
    • Affects many areas of life
    • May need support with:
      • Daily living
      • Communication
      • Independence
  • Learning difficulty
    • Affects specific tasks only
    • Example:
      • Reading, writing, maths, or focus

3. Duration and Support

  • Learning disability
    • Lifelong
    • Requires continuous support
  • Learning difficulty
    • Can be managed or improved
    • With the right support, many people:
      • Become independent
      • Succeed in education and work

4. Definition and Use of Terms

  • In places like the UK:
    • “Learning disability” = broader, more significant condition
    • “Learning difficulty” = specific learning issue
  • In the United States:
    • “Learning disability” is often used as an umbrella term
    • Covers conditions like dyslexia and dysgraphia

👉 This difference in language can cause confusion.


Can Someone Have Both?

👉 Yes

A person can:

  • Have a learning disability
  • And also have specific learning difficulties

Example:

  • A person with a learning disability may also have:
    • Dyslexia
    • ADHD

Why This Difference Matters

Understanding the difference helps:

  • Provide the right type of support
  • Avoid misunderstanding
  • Improve education and care planning

👉 Using the wrong term can lead to:

  • Incorrect support
  • Missed needs

Simple Summary (Easy Read Style)

  • A learning disability:
    • Affects overall learning and daily life
    • Is lifelong
    • Needs ongoing support
  • A learning difficulty:
    • Affects specific skills (like reading or maths)
    • Does not affect intelligence
    • Can be managed with support
  • A person can have both

Powerful Insight for Your Book

👉 “A learning disability affects how someone lives —
A learning difficulty affects how someone learns.”

Learning Disability vs Mental Health Problem

 


Key Message

Learning disabilities and mental health problems are not the same.

👉 But:

  • They can happen together
  • And often affect each other

What Is a Mental Health Problem?

A mental health problem is:

  • A condition that affects:
    • Emotions
    • Thoughts
    • Behaviour

Examples include:

  • Anxiety disorder
  • Depression
  • Other emotional or psychiatric difficulties

📊 Important fact:

  • Around 1 in 4 people experience a mental health problem each year

👉 Mental health problems:

  • Can affect anyone
  • May be temporary or long-term
  • Can often be treated or managed

What Is a Learning Disability?

A learning disability is:

  • A lifelong condition
  • Affects:
    • Understanding
    • Learning
    • Everyday life skills

👉 It involves:

  • Reduced intellectual functioning
  • Difficulties with daily activities (e.g. communication, independence)

Are They the Same?

👉 No — they are different

Learning DisabilityMental Health Problem
Lifelong conditionCan happen at any time
Affects learning and understandingAffects emotions and mental wellbeing
Linked to intellectual functioningLinked to emotional and psychological health
Not “curable” but can be supportedOften treatable or manageable

Can Someone Have Both?

👉 Yes — and it is quite common

Research shows:

  • Around 27%–41% of adults with a learning disability also have a mental health problem
  • Around 40% of children with a learning disability experience mental health difficulties

Why Are Mental Health Problems More Common?

People with learning disabilities may face:

Social Challenges

  • Loneliness
  • Social exclusion
  • Difficulty forming relationships

Life Experiences

  • Poverty
  • Limited opportunities
  • Negative life events

Attitudes from Others

  • Stigma
  • Discrimination
  • Being misunderstood

👉 These factors can increase:

  • Stress
  • Low self-esteem
  • Emotional distress

Why Mental Health Problems Are Often Missed

1. Diagnostic Overshadowing

This means:

  • Symptoms of mental health problems are mistaken for the learning disability

👉 Result:

  • The real issue is missed

2. Communication Difficulties

Some people may:

  • Find it hard to explain how they feel
  • Struggle to describe symptoms

3. Services Are Separated

  • Learning disability services and mental health services:
    • Often work separately

👉 This can lead to:

  • Poor communication
  • Missed diagnoses
  • Gaps in support

Why This Matters

If mental health problems are not recognised:

  • People may not get the right help
  • Behaviour may worsen
  • Quality of life may decrease

👉 Early and accurate support is essential.


Key Message

  • Learning disabilities and mental health problems are different
  • But they are closely linked
  • People can have both at the same time

👉 Support must look at the whole person, not just one condition.


Simple Summary (Easy Read Style)

  • A learning disability affects learning and understanding
  • A mental health problem affects feelings and emotions
  • They are not the same
  • A person can have both
  • Mental health problems are often missed in people with learning disabilities
  • People need the right support for both

Powerful Insight for Your Book

👉 “If we only see the disability, we may miss the distress.”

Learning Disabilities: Research, Reading, and Evidence-Based Support

 


Key Message

Learning disabilities—especially reading difficulties like dyslexia—are:

  • Common
  • Brain-based (neurological)
  • Best supported with evidence-based teaching

👉 The biggest issue is not ability—
it is access to the right support.


Understanding Reading Disabilities (Dyslexia)

The paper focuses strongly on reading:

👉 Dyslexia is:

  • A language-based learning disability
  • Not a visual problem
  • Not caused by laziness or lack of effort

📊 Key fact:

  • Around 10–15% of people may have dyslexia
  • In a class of 30 → about 3–5 children

How Reading Works

Reading is not automatic—it involves multiple skills:

  • Recognising letters and sounds
  • Blending sounds into words
  • Understanding meaning (comprehension)

👉 Children with dyslexia may struggle with:

  • Decoding words
  • Spelling
  • Reading fluency

Common Misconceptions

❌ Myth: Dyslexia is a visual problem

👉 (e.g. letters moving or reversing)

✔ Reality:

  • Dyslexia is mainly a language processing difficulty

❌ Myth: Vision therapies can fix dyslexia

✔ Reality:

  • These are not evidence-based treatments

What Actually Works (Evidence-Based Support)

The research strongly supports:

Structured Literacy

This is the most effective approach.

It includes:

  • Explicit teaching of sounds (phonics)
  • Step-by-step instruction
  • Repetition and practice
  • Clear structure

👉 It helps children:

  • Understand how language works
  • Build reading skills gradually

📌 Key point:

  • This approach is based on scientific research, not guesswork

The Science Behind Learning Disabilities

Learning disabilities are:

  • Neurodevelopmental
  • Linked to how the brain processes:
    • Language
    • Memory
    • Information

👉 They are:

  • Not caused by poor teaching
  • Not caused by lack of intelligence

The Multiple Deficit Model

The research explains that:

👉 Learning disabilities are not caused by one single problem

Instead:

  • They involve multiple cognitive factors, such as:
    • Processing speed
    • Memory
    • Attention

👉 This is called:

  • A “multiple deficit model”

This helps explain why:

  • No two individuals are the same
  • Difficulties can overlap (e.g. dyslexia + ADHD)

Why Early Support Matters

Without support:

  • Children may fall behind quickly
  • Confidence may drop
  • Mental health may be affected

With support:

  • Skills improve
  • Confidence builds
  • Long-term outcomes are better

Link to Other Conditions

Learning disabilities often occur alongside:

  • Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
  • Language disorders
  • Mental health difficulties

👉 This is called comorbidity (co-occurring conditions)


Key Message About Support

👉 The most important takeaway:

  • Support must be:
    • Early
    • Structured
    • Evidence-based

NOT:

  • Based on myths
  • Based on unproven treatments

Simple Summary (Easy Read Style)

  • Learning disabilities affect how the brain learns
  • Dyslexia affects reading and spelling
  • It is not a vision problem
  • Around 1 in 10 people may have it
  • The best support is:
    • Structured teaching
    • Clear, step-by-step learning
  • Some treatments are not evidence-based
  • Early help makes a big difference

Powerful Insight for Your Book

👉 “The problem is not that children cannot learn —
it is that they are not always taught in the way they need.”


Optional Link to Your Other Sections

This connects strongly with everything you are building:

  • DSM-5 (Specific Learning Disorder)
  • Mental health and LDs
  • Challenging behaviour
  • Therapy and support

👉 It reinforces your overall message:
Understanding + Evidence-Based Support = Better Outcomes

Specific Learning Disorder (SLD) – DSM-5 Explained

 


What Is DSM-5?

The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition is used by professionals to:

  • Diagnose mental health and developmental conditions
  • Provide clear criteria for assessment
  • Ensure consistency across services

What Is Specific Learning Disorder (SLD)?

In the DSM-5, learning disabilities are called:

👉 Specific Learning Disorder

It is classified as a:

  • Neurodevelopmental disorder
  • A condition that affects how the brain develops and processes information

Definition of SLD

Specific Learning Disorder means:

  • A person has persistent difficulties in:
    • Reading
    • Writing
    • Mathematics

👉 These difficulties:

  • Continue over time
  • Occur despite:
    • Normal intelligence
    • Appropriate teaching and support

Important Change in DSM-5

Single Diagnosis Approach

Before DSM-5 (in DSM-IV), there were separate diagnoses:

  • Reading Disorder
  • Mathematics Disorder
  • Disorder of Written Expression

👉 DSM-5 changed this by:

  • Combining them into one diagnosis: SLD
  • Adding “specifiers” to describe the exact difficulty

Core Diagnostic Criteria

To be diagnosed with SLD, a person must meet the following:

1. Persistent Difficulties

  • Problems must last for at least 6 months
  • Even after targeted support or intervention

2. Academic Skills Below Expected Level

  • Skills are significantly below what is expected for age

3. Early Onset

  • Difficulties usually begin in:
    • Early school years

👉 However:

  • They may become more noticeable as school demands increase

4. Not Better Explained by Other Causes

  • Not due to:
    • Intellectual disability
    • Lack of education
    • Sensory issues (e.g. vision or hearing problems)

Severity Levels in SLD

DSM-5 identifies three levels:

Mild

  • Difficulties in one or two areas
  • Person can cope with:
    • Support
    • Accommodations

Moderate

  • More noticeable difficulties
  • Requires:
    • Regular support
    • Specialized teaching

Severe

  • Significant difficulties across multiple areas
  • Requires:
    • Intensive
    • Individualised support

SLD Specifiers (Types of Difficulties)

Although it is one diagnosis, DSM-5 uses specifiers to describe the area affected:


1. With Impairment in Reading

(often called Dyslexia)

Includes difficulties with:

  • Word reading accuracy
  • Reading speed (fluency)
  • Reading comprehension

2. With Impairment in Written Expression

Includes difficulties with:

  • Spelling
  • Grammar and punctuation
  • Organising written work

3. With Impairment in Mathematics

(often called Dyscalculia)

Includes difficulties with:

  • Number sense
  • Calculations
  • Mathematical reasoning

Key Change: No IQ Discrepancy Requirement

In the past:

  • Diagnosis required a gap between:
    • IQ (intelligence)
    • Academic performance

👉 DSM-5 removed this rule.

Now:

  • Focus is on actual learning difficulties, not IQ comparisons

How SLD Is Diagnosed

Diagnosis involves:

  • Standardised academic testing
  • Clinical assessment
  • Developmental history
  • Input from:
    • Teachers
    • Parents
    • Professionals

👉 It is a comprehensive assessment, not just one test.


Comorbidity (Co-Occurring Conditions)

SLD often occurs alongside other conditions, such as:

  • Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
  • Anxiety disorder
  • Behavioural difficulties

👉 These conditions can:

  • Increase challenges
  • Affect learning and wellbeing

Important Distinction

Specific Learning Disorder is:

  • Not an intellectual disability
  • People usually have:
    • Average or above-average intelligence

👉 The difficulty is in processing information, not ability.


Key Message

The DSM-5 approach shows that:

  • Learning disabilities are complex and individual
  • They should be understood as:
    • Brain-based differences
  • Support should be:
    • Personalised
    • Ongoing

Simple Summary (Easy Read Style)

  • DSM-5 calls learning disabilities Specific Learning Disorder (SLD)
  • It is a brain-based condition
  • It affects:
    • Reading
    • Writing
    • Maths
  • It must:
    • Last at least 6 months
    • Be below expected level
  • There are different severity levels
  • It can happen alongside:
    • ADHD
    • Anxiety
  • It is not linked to low intelligence

Powerful Insight for Your Book

👉 “DSM-5 moved away from labels and towards understanding the full picture of how a person learns.”

Psychological Treatments for People with Learning Disabilities

 


Key Message

People with learning disabilities can benefit from psychological therapies.

👉 However:

  • They have often been excluded or overlooked
  • Therapy has not always been adapted to meet their needs

Mental Health and Learning Disabilities

People with learning disabilities are:

  • More likely to experience mental health problems
  • Estimated rates range from 10% to 39% or higher

These may include:

  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Emotional or behavioural difficulties

👉 This shows why psychological support is so important.


Do Psychological Therapies Work?

Yes — but with the right approach.

Research shows:

  • Psychological therapies can have a moderate positive effect
  • They can help with:
    • Depression
    • Anger
    • Emotional regulation

👉 In particular:

  • Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) is one of the most effective approaches

The Problem: Historical Barriers

In the past, people with learning disabilities were often:

  • Seen as “unsuitable” for therapy
  • Excluded from psychological services
  • Not offered the same support as others

This has been described as:

“The unoffered chair” — meaning therapy was not even offered

👉 This was not because therapy doesn’t work,
but because systems were not adapted properly.


Why Therapy Has Been Difficult to Access

1. Lack of Adaptation

  • Traditional therapy relies on:
    • Language
    • Abstract thinking
  • These may need adjusting for people with learning disabilities

2. Assumptions by Professionals

  • Some believed therapy would not be effective
  • This led to fewer referrals

3. Referral Issues

  • Individuals may not refer themselves
  • Referrals are often made by:
    • Carers
    • Professionals

👉 This can sometimes overlook the person’s own wishes


Types of Psychological Therapies

1. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)

  • Focuses on:
    • Thoughts
    • Feelings
    • Behaviour

👉 Adapted CBT can:

  • Use simpler language
  • Include visual aids
  • Repeat key ideas

✔ Effective for:

  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Anger

2. Behavioural Therapies

  • Focus on:
    • Understanding behaviour
    • Changing responses

👉 Often used for:

  • Challenging behaviour
  • Emotional regulation

3. Psychotherapy and Counselling

  • Talking therapies that explore:
    • Feelings
    • Life experiences
    • Relationships

👉 Must be adapted to:

  • Communication level
  • Cognitive ability

4. Social and Interpersonal Approaches

  • Focus on:
    • Relationships
    • Social understanding

⚠️ Evidence is more limited compared to CBT


Adapting Therapy for Success

For therapy to work, it must be:

Accessible

  • Simple, clear language
  • Visual supports
  • Structured sessions

Flexible

  • Slower pace
  • Repetition
  • Practical examples

Person-Centred

  • Based on the individual’s needs
  • Involving family or carers when appropriate

What Makes Therapy Effective?

Successful therapy includes:

  • Building trust and communication
  • Understanding the person’s:
    • Experiences
    • Environment
    • Support needs
  • Working at the person’s pace

👉 Individual (1-to-1) therapy is often more effective than group therapy


Challenges in Research and Practice

There are still gaps:

  • Limited research compared to the general population
  • Small study sizes
  • Lack of adapted therapy models

👉 More research and training are needed.


Modern Understanding

Today, there is growing recognition that:

  • People with learning disabilities can benefit from therapy
  • Services must be:
    • Inclusive
    • Adapted
    • Accessible

👉 The focus is shifting from:

  • “Can they have therapy?”
    ➡️ to
  • “How do we make therapy work for them?”

Key Message

Psychological therapies:

  • Do work for people with learning disabilities
  • Must be adapted, not denied

👉 Everyone has the right to:

  • Mental health support
  • Emotional wellbeing
  • Being heard and understood

Simple Summary (Easy Read Style)

  • People with learning disabilities can have mental health problems
  • Therapy can help
  • In the past, people were often left out of therapy
  • The problem was lack of support, not ability
  • Therapy should be:
    • Simple
    • Clear
    • Adapted
  • CBT is one of the most effective therapies
  • Everyone deserves access to mental health support

Powerful Insight for Your Book

👉 “The issue was never that people couldn’t benefit from therapy —
it was that therapy wasn’t built for them.”

Challenging Behaviour and Learning Disabilities

 


What Is Challenging Behaviour?

Challenging behaviour refers to actions that:

  • Put the person or others at risk
  • Make it difficult to take part in everyday life
  • Limit access to education, services, or community life

👉 It is often defined as behaviour that is:

  • Intense
  • Frequent
  • Long-lasting

Examples include:

  • Aggression or violence
  • Self-injury
  • Destructive behaviour
  • Repetitive behaviours

Important Understanding

Challenging behaviour is not just “bad behaviour.”

👉 It is often:

  • A way of communicating distress
  • A response to unmet needs
  • Linked to environment or experiences

A key principle:

All behaviour has meaning


Connection to Learning Disabilities

People with learning disabilities may:

  • Find it harder to:
    • Understand information
    • Communicate needs
    • Cope independently

This can lead to frustration and distress.

👉 As a result:

  • Challenging behaviour may develop as a way to cope or communicate

Increased Risks

People with learning disabilities are more likely to:

  • Experience:
    • Discrimination
    • Stigma
    • Social isolation
  • Have fewer coping strategies or support systems

👉 This increases the risk of:

  • Mental health difficulties
  • Emotional distress
  • Behaviour that challenges

Examples of Challenging Behaviour

Physical Behaviours

  • Hitting, kicking, biting
  • Self-harm (e.g. head banging)

Verbal Behaviours

  • Shouting or swearing
  • Threatening language

Behaviour Toward Environment

  • Throwing objects
  • Damaging property

Other Behaviours

  • Withdrawal or refusal
  • Repetitive or unusual actions

Why Does Challenging Behaviour Happen?

Challenging behaviour can be caused by many factors:

Biological

  • Pain or illness
  • Sensory needs

Psychological

  • Anxiety
  • Feeling misunderstood
  • Low self-esteem

Social

  • Loneliness
  • Lack of support
  • Wanting attention or control

Environmental

  • Noise, stress, or change
  • Unclear expectations

👉 Often, it is a combination of factors


Behaviour as Communication

Many people—especially children or those with communication difficulties—use behaviour to express:

  • “I don’t understand”
  • “I am overwhelmed”
  • “I need help”
  • “I am upset or anxious”

👉 This is why understanding behaviour is more important than just trying to stop it.


Psychological Approaches to Support

1. Behavioural Approach

This approach looks at:

  • What happens before the behaviour (triggers)
  • The behaviour itself
  • What happens after (consequences)

This is often called:

  • ABC Model (Antecedent – Behaviour – Consequence)

👉 It helps identify why the behaviour is happening


2. Positive Behaviour Support (PBS)

Focuses on:

  • Preventing behaviour
  • Teaching new skills
  • Improving quality of life

3. Reinforcement Strategies

  • Positive reinforcement → rewarding helpful behaviour
  • Negative reinforcement → removing stress triggers

👉 Goal: Replace challenging behaviour with safer, more effective communication


4. Therapy Approaches

  • Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)
    • Helps with anxiety and depression
    • Can be adapted for people with learning disabilities

Why Understanding Matters

If behaviour is misunderstood:

  • People may be punished instead of supported
  • Mental health may worsen
  • Behaviour may escalate

👉 If behaviour is understood:

  • Support becomes more effective
  • Stress is reduced
  • Outcomes improve

Impact of Challenging Behaviour

Without support, it can lead to:

  • Exclusion from school or services
  • Reduced learning opportunities
  • Social isolation
  • Increased stress for families and staff

👉 Early support is essential.


Key Message

Challenging behaviour is:

  • A form of communication
  • Often linked to unmet needs or distress
  • Not something to simply “control”

👉 The goal is to:

  • Understand the cause
  • Support the person
  • Teach better ways to communicate

Simple Summary (Easy Read Style)

  • Challenging behaviour means actions that are difficult or unsafe
  • It is often a way of communicating feelings or needs
  • People with learning disabilities are more likely to experience it
  • Causes include:
    • Stress
    • Anxiety
    • Environment
    • Communication difficulties
  • Support should focus on:
    • Understanding the cause
    • Teaching new skills
    • Supporting mental health

Add-On for Your Book (Insight Section)

A key message you can highlight:

👉 “Don’t ask: What is wrong with this person?
Ask: What has happened to this person?”

This shifts the focus from:

  • Blame → to understanding
  • Control → to support
  • Behaviour → to needs



Mental Health Problems in People with Learning Disabilities

Key Message

People with learning disabilities are:

  • Just as likely – or more likely to experience mental health problems
  • But these problems are often missed, misunderstood, or untreated

👉 This is a major issue in health and social care.


What Is Mental Illness?

A mental illness is:

  • A condition that affects:
    • Mood
    • Thinking
    • Behaviour

👉 It can interfere with daily life and wellbeing


Why Mental Health Problems Are Often Missed

1. Diagnostic Overshadowing

This is when:

  • Symptoms of mental health problems are mistaken for the learning disability itself

👉 Result:

  • Mental health conditions go undiagnosed and untreated

2. Communication Difficulties

Some people may:

  • Struggle to explain how they feel
  • Not recognise their own mental health symptoms

👉 This makes diagnosis harder.


3. Behaviour Is Misunderstood

  • Changes in behaviour may be seen as:
    • “Challenging behaviour”
  • Instead of recognising:
    • A possible mental health problem

👉 Important:
Behaviour may be a sign of distress.


Link Between Mental Health and Challenging Behaviour

  • Mental health problems can:
    • Increase challenging behaviour
  • Challenging behaviour can:
    • Be a symptom of mental illness (e.g. depression)

👉 The two are closely connected


Common Mental Health Conditions

People with learning disabilities may experience:

  • Depression
    • Low mood
    • Loss of interest
    • Low energy
  • Anxiety disorder
    • Constant worry
    • Physical symptoms (e.g. racing heart)
  • Bipolar disorder
    • Mood swings (highs and lows)
  • Schizophrenia
    • Hallucinations
    • Delusions


What Increases the Risk?

People with learning disabilities are more likely to experience risk factors such as:

Social Factors

  • Isolation (few friends or relationships)
  • Poverty
  • Unemployment
  • Lack of meaningful activities

Emotional Factors

  • Low self-esteem
  • Lack of control over life

Life Experiences

  • Institutional care
  • Early rejection or trauma

👉 These increase vulnerability to mental health problems


Severity and Type of Disability

  • Severe/profound learning disabilities
    • Mental health issues may be linked to:
      • Brain or biological differences
  • Mild/moderate learning disabilities
    • Mental health issues are often linked to:
      • Social and environmental factors

👉 Support must be individualised


Recognising the Signs

Signs may include:

  • Changes in behaviour
  • Withdrawal or aggression
  • Sleep problems
  • Loss of interest
  • Increased anxiety or distress

👉 These signs can be easily missed, so awareness is essential.


Assessment and Diagnosis

Good assessment should:

  • Look at:
    • Behaviour changes
    • Emotional wellbeing
    • Life circumstances
  • Include:
    • Family input
    • Carers and support staff

👉 This is important because:

  • The person may not be able to explain symptoms clearly

Treatment and Support

Effective support may include:

1. Psychological Support

  • Talking therapies
  • Behavioural approaches

2. Medication

  • Used when appropriate
  • Must be monitored carefully

3. Environmental Support

  • Improving daily life
  • Reducing stress
  • Increasing inclusion

4. Educational and Social Support

  • Structured routines
  • Meaningful activities
  • Social connections

👉 A holistic approach works best.


Why Early Support Matters

Without support:

  • Mental health can worsen
  • Behaviour may escalate
  • Quality of life decreases

With support:

  • Wellbeing improves
  • Independence increases
  • Behaviour often reduces

Key Message

👉 Mental health problems in people with learning disabilities are:

  • Common
  • Often overlooked
  • Treatable with the right support

Simple Summary (Easy Read Style)

  • People with learning disabilities can have mental health problems
  • These problems are often missed or misunderstood
  • Behaviour may be a sign of distress
  • Common conditions include:
    • Depression
    • Anxiety
  • Causes include:
    • Isolation
    • Low confidence
    • Life experiences
  • Good support includes:
    • Assessment
    • Therapy
    • Support from family and staff

Powerful Insight for Your Book

👉 “If we only look at behaviour, we miss the person behind it.”

This links everything you are building:

  • Learning disabilities
  • Mental health
  • Challenging behaviour
  • Advocacy and support


Mental Health vs Mental Illness

  Key Message Mental health and mental illness are not the same thing . 👉 The main difference is: Mental health = everyone has it ...