New Theories Help
Change Stereotypes about Schizophrenia
(October 22, 2007) --
John Forbes Nash Jr. won the Nobel Prize in economics in 1994. The 2001
film "A Beautiful Mind," a biopic about his life, won four Oscars.
But the Princeton University professor and math prodigy also suffers from
schizophrenia. And his successes can prove that people living with the
mental condition can and do lead successful lives.
With
proper medication and care, many schizophrenics are able to function
in society, said Dr. Shirley Taylor, a psychologist with Heartland Health
Counseling Services. She compared the brain disease to a chronic condition
like diabetes in that there are certain levels of dysfunction.
"Schizophrenia is a brain disease that is on a continuum, so not
everybody who has schizophrenia is sick all the time," she said.
Despite advancements in treatment and a better understanding of the
condition, there still are many misconceptions about schizophrenia. Some of
the old beliefs still alive are that the person suffers from multiple
personalities or is possessed by a demon. There's also the belief that it's
brought on by a person's bad moral choices, drug or alcohol use or that
someone drove them to the condition.
None of the above is true, said Kristina Hannon, clinical director of
adult mental health services for the Family Guidance Center for Behavioral
Healthcare. The conditions can be brought on by a number of genetic and
environmental factors, she said.
"Most research shows that schizophrenia is caused by a complex
interaction of a biological predisposition or a genetic predisposition and
environmental factors," she said. "So it is a very complex interaction
between those things. Neither of those things have distinctly been
identified as the cause of schizophrenia, and we can't say exactly what
causes it, but it is a complex interaction of those things."
Schizophrenia is described by the Web site schizophrenia.com as a
chronic, severe and disabling brain disease that affects about 1 percent of
the population. The condition affects men and women differently but appears
earlier in men. Men usually develop symptoms in their late teens or early
20s while women show the disorder in their 20s or early 30s.
People who suffer from the condition often experience sensory
hallucinations, such as
hearing voices or imagining people,
objects and
smells.
Mrs. Hannon said there are both
positive and negative symptoms of the
condition. The positive ones that most people are familiar with include
hallucinations, delusions and paranoid thoughts.
"The thought that somebody is out to get you or you believe that people
are inserting thoughts into your mind or you believe you can read other
people's minds, those are some of the positive symptoms we most commonly
think of," Mrs. Hannon said.
The negative symptoms include being socially withdrawn, frightened,
anxious or confused.
"Those symptoms are as difficult to treat as well as the positive," Mrs.
Hannon said.
But newer anti-psychotic medicines enable more people who suffer from the
condition to function better in society than those drugs of the past. Side
effects from older medicines such as
Thorazine, which was widely used to
treat schizophrenia 30 years ago, often kept sufferers lethargic and
confused beyond their condition. Newer drugs have fewer
side effects and
target certain areas of the brain.
"The way we viewed those with schizophrenia in the past, we would think
of chronic patients at the state hospital, if they were so bad they needed
to be in State Hospital, they were probably heavily medicated to control the
hallucinations or delusions, so they weren't able to function in society,
not only because of illness, but by being heavily medicated," Dr. Taylor
said. "What we didn't take into account was all those persons with
schizophrenia who made it somehow without being in the hospital and being
heavily medicated. "
With proper medication, counseling and family support, people with
schizophrenia can live fruitful and productive lives, Mrs. Hannon added.
"Having schizophrenia can be a very difficult journey to go through by
yourself," she said. "It's very important (that) families are supportive,
and families need to seek out opportunities to get educated on what
schizophrenia is."
Source: Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News
Last updated: 10/07
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