Link Between Child
Abuse and Schizophrenia Proposed
(June 16, 2006) -- There is strong evidence to support the theory that
child abuse
can cause
schizophrenia, two researchers argued at medical conferences in London
and Madrid this week.
Paul Hammersley, of the University of Manchester, and Dr. John Read, from
the University of Auckland, New Zealand, reviewed 40 studies of psychiatric
patients and found that most of these individuals were
sexually
or
physically abused as children or adults. In a review of 13 studies of
schizophrenics, they found abuse rates from a low of 51 percent to a
high of 97 percent.
Citing the known link between the symptoms of
post-traumatic stress disorder and schizophrenia, Hammersley and Read
charge that many schizophrenic symptoms may actually be caused by trauma.
"I hope we soon see a more balanced and evidence-based approach to
schizophrenia and people using mental health services being asked what has
happened to them and being given help instead of stigmatizing labels and
mood-altering drugs," Read said in a statement.
"Child abuse was a reality for a large number of sufferers of psychosis,"
Hammersley added. "The experience of hearing voices is consistently
associated with childhood trauma regardless of diagnosis or genetic
pedigree."
Genes may still play a role in schizophrenia, but genes alone do not
cause the illness, the researchers argue. Apart from Alzheimer's disease,
not a single gene has been shown to play a key role in any mental illness,
they point out.
Schizophrenia is a disorder of altered emotions, thought processes, and
perceptions of reality. In addition to hearing voices, schizophrenics may
suffer hallucinations and delusions and have difficulty with memory and
intellectual functioning. Symptoms of the disorder are most apt to appear in
the late teens and 20s.
Hammersley and Read think all patients seen in the mental health arena
should be asked about whether they have suffered any kind of abuse in their
lifetime. They also think
antipsychotic drugs should not be automatically doled out; rather these
individuals should be offered psychological therapies more often.
"What is important about all this," Hammersley told Reuters Health, "is
whether or not mental health services change. Users of those services tell
me over and over again, they are fed up being offered nothing but
medication."
The findings were scheduled for presentation at the Institute of
Psychiatry in London and the 15th ISPS Symposium for the Psychotherapy of
Schizophrenia and other Psychoses in Madrid.
Source: Reuters Health
Last updated: 06/06
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