Experts Want to
Rename Schizophrenia
(October 10, 2006) -- Mental health experts called on Monday for the term
schizophrenia to be dropped, saying it has no scientific validity, is
imprecise and stigmatizing.
"It is a harmful concept," said Professor Marius Romme, a visiting
professor of social psychiatry at the University of Central England in
Birmingham.
He added that symptoms such as
delusions, hearing voices and
hallucinations are not the results of the illness but may be reactions to
traumatic and troubling events in life.
Speaking at a news conference, Richard Bentall, a professor of clinical
psychology at the University of Manchester, said the concept of
schizophrenia is scientifically meaningless.
"It groups together a whole range of different problems under one label
-- the assumption is that all of these people with all of these different
problems have the same brain disease," he added.
Schizophrenia affects about 1 percent of people in the United States and
Britain. Treatments such as
atypical antipsychotic drugs focus on
eliminating the symptoms. But the drugs can cause
side effects such as
weight gain, an increased risk of diabetes and sexual dysfunction.
Paul Hammersley of the University of Manchester who recently helped
launch The Campaign for the Abolition of the Schizophrenia Label (CASL),
said there is no agreement on the cause of the illness or its treatment.
CASL argues that the term schizophrenia is extremely damaging to those to
whom it is applied and implies unpredictability, being dangerous, unable to
cope and someone in need of life-long treatment.
"It is like cancelling someone's life," said Hammersley. "We generally
believe this word has to go."
Other psychiatrists agree that schizophrenia is an unsatisfactory term
that conveys bizarreness but they are concerned that discarding the term
could lead to problems classifying patients with psychosis.
"If we don't have some way of distinguishing between patients, then those
with bipolar disorder or
obsessional disorder would be mixed up with those
currently diagnosed as having schizophrenia and might receive treatments
wholly inappropriate for them," said Robin Murray, a professor of psychiatry
at the Institute of Psychiatry in London.
He suggested replacing the term schizophrenia with the label
dopamine dysregulation disorder, which he said more accurately reflects what
is happening in the brain of someone who is psychotic.
Source: Reuters
Last updated: 10/06
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