I know most people were either alcohol-happy or even other drugs like marijuana wasn’t uncommon when I was a teen-21yo (yes, baptized, servant males, elder kids etc). Once people got older and married they had psychological illnesses, if you weren’t outright schizophrenic, many people had fibromyalgia or chronic fatigue syndrome. One kid I grew up with, beautiful girl, full of life and energy, got married at 18 with a ‘star witness’ 25yo elder-and-co-family and became chronically fatigued in 2 months. No wonder so many take their own life or have attempted.
The literature is scant since JW’s make up literally 0.1% of the population, but here are some interesting starting points:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/1174772/
followers of the sect are three times more likely to be diagnosed as suffering from schizophrenia and nearly four times more likely from paranoid schizophrenia than the rest of the population at risk.
Back of the napkin analysis:
This means that between 1 and 2% of all Witnesses are likely to be schizophrenic or paranoid schizophrenic. If this holds not just to schizophrenia but any mental illness, which is 20% of the population, that says 60-80% of JWs can be diagnosed with a mental illness.
Having administered tests like that myself however, I will note that answering questionnaires truthfully as a JW (the belief and fear of imminent disaster and self-centered divine channels and intervention) does already put you high up on the scores for diagnosable psychosis.
Given 47% of patients with schizophrenia have serious problems with drug or alcohol use during their lifetime and 10% of patients with diagnosed mental illness self-reported such problems in the last year, that suggests a rate of 1 in 5 JW’s have been alcoholics/drug users in the last year.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25261980/
This article is really good for therapists that seek to engage with JWs or exJWs.
Quote:
It is possible that members from a Fundamentalist religion may experience a higher prevalence of psychosis or be vulnerable to a psychotic level of thinking. This is because at its core, Fundamentalism relies upon the splitting off of good and bad objects, and dualistic ways of viewing the world that do not easily allow for tolerating or coping with ambiguity, uncertainty, or the nuance of complex life circumstances. … Since the very premise of [Jehovah’s Witnesses] relies upon the threat of annihilation as a means of control, it is possible that members’ worldviews may be tinged with paranoid or persecutory fears.