None of the posts in this thread have provided any supporting evidence, except for your
post 21, which misinterpreted
the study it cited.
Quoting myself from post no 40,
"I found a web site which supported mainstream mental health perspectives deliberately. I also looked for a place which presented the point in plain english, so anyone could read it, the articles in the BMJ and scientific reaearch papers about it prove the same point, but I am no scientist, and I did not want to limit the thread to something only people with fancy PhD's could read." and
"What I am saying is there is a shortage of science in the realm of mental health, and if there was not then these clear numbers of errors would not exist. You are entirely correct that the article I linked to is not saying that, but then I was only trying to show that the proffessionals themselves know that there is an major problem with diagnostic accuracy.
Since I posted the link itself, your accusation that I wanted to misrepresent the article that I linked to seems particularly futile.
That study was talking specifically about misdiagnosis by primary care doctors, not by mental health specialists like you implied.
Where did I imply this?
Your error would be akin to looking at the rate of cancer misdiagnoses by podiatrists and blaming inadequate oncology research instead of blaming the podiatrists' inadequate training and/or for them not staying in their lane.
I do not know how it works elsewhere in the world, but in my country a GP has to think you have a mental health problem of some kind, before you can get to a psychiatrists, psychologist, or a psycholililala. (I made that last one up, before anyone accuses me of henious deliberate misrepresentation

). I do believe if there was enough real science applied to the area of mental health the horrific complexity of getting to an accurate diagnosis would not exist, years of avoidable suffering would then not exist for the patients, and with everything they are already doing as it is, we cannot realistically solve this by training every GP to be a fantastic mind specialist as well.
Of course, brain science is actually neurology, and "mind" could mean spirit for all know, because no one knows what the mind is...some world views believe it must be the brain, but that is opinion, not fact.
What I can assure you I have noticed is that you are in this thread apparently outright arguing that there is no shortfall in scientific research regarding mental health, and that it is downright "toxic" to believe that Jesus can help those who suffer. What is quite incomrehensible to me is that you do not appear to see a problem with the situation as it is. The need is obvious, the doctors are fully booked, the waiting times are months, often years, the diagnosis are unreliable, most of the best results are lifelong treatments, not cures, the bill is astronomical, however medicine is funded, and the human suffering is increasing and just going on and on.
So it would be helpful if you had some supportive evidence to back up your accusations, please feel free to post it, or a link.