scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Can you be in the FBI with a mental illness? 

Answers from top 10 papers

More filters
Papers (10)Insight
It is not metaphysically impossible that the FBI is out to get you (or me for that matter).
To be an agent in a life with (or without) mental illness can mean deciding to do a particular thing (e. g., return to work) or to assert basic rights while facing injustice.
Individuals with a mental illness may particularly be at risk due to an already instable mental health status.
The FBI can be used to describe the evolution of symptoms and the course of the illness of Pick complex patients who present initially with FTD-bv or who present with PPA and subsequently develop the behavioral disorder.
The authors note that it is preferable that people with mental illness not become involved in the criminal justice system in the first place.
While such disorders do not necessarily require treatment, unrecognized mental illness may place offenders at greater risk while incarcerated than offenders without mental illness.
Criminal justice involvement is a complex and costly problem that affects a substantial proportion of adults with serious mental illness who receive services across state agencies.
Persons with mental illness may be particularly attentive to how they are treated by police.
If so, then there may be a potential for these minds to become dysfunctional, or for artificial intelligences and robots to suffer from mental illness.
Not all persons with a major mental illness are capable of achieving high levels of social and vocational functioning; however, living in a place that provides asylum can promote a higher quality of life.