'Schizophrenic'
Label Doubles the Torture Felt by Sufferers
(November 19, 2007) -- Peter Bullimore still hears aggressive
voices inside his head, but he has rejected the stigmatising label of
"schizophrenia" and is now campaigning for it to be discarded.

Photo / Dean PurcellPete Bullimore
(left) and fellow campaigner Paul Hammersley. |
Schizophrenia is a long-accepted diagnostic category in psychiatric
manuals used by mental health workers. But it is also a word loaded with
cultural meaning, stereotypes and fear. Searching the combination
"schizophrenia and murder" in the Herald's 8-year-old computerised clippings
file produced 93 results.
Mr Bullimore, 46, from Britain, an advocate for consumers of mental
health care who last week addressed the Making Sense of Psychosis conference
at Auckland University, said he had been repeatedly victimised because of
his schizophrenia label. He naively told others of the diagnosis, at first
not realising what this could lead to.
"I had my face and body slashed. I was spat at. They wrote on my windows
'schizo out'."
After his wife threw him out, he lived at a housing estate which was a
"dumping ground" for the
mentally ill.
"People asked, 'What are you doing around here?' and I said I had lost my
family because I had got schizophrenia. You can't envisage the backlash you
are going to get just by being honest."
His recovery began when he joined a group for people who heard voices. He
had been using numerous psychiatric medicines but stopped taking them in
1999.
"I've reclaimed my life by getting rid of the label schizophrenia," Mr
Bullimore said. "I'm proud to say I'm a voice-hearer."
The voices were mainly negative. The main one was the voice of the person
who physically and sexually abused him when he was aged between 5 and 13. He
attributes the fact he hears voices to that trauma.
He said that sometimes the voices told him to harm others, but he never
had. They also told him to harm himself and in the past he had obeyed, "but
in later years I'm more in control of this".
Facing his abuser and telling her that what she had done was wrong had
helped him greatly. After this, when he heard her voice in his head, he was
no longer afraid.
His co-campaigner, Paul Hammersley, the head of a cognitive behaviour
therapy programme at Manchester University, said schizophrenia as a label
was out-of-date, based on weak science and of little use.
Instead, it could be split into
anxiety psychosis, sensitivity psychosis,
drug-related psychosis and
post-traumatic psychosis.
Auckland University's head of psychological medicine, Professor Rob Kydd,
said he sympathised with objections over the stigma associated with the word
schizophrenia.
"But I'm a bit concerned about people moving on too quickly before they
have sorted out what's going to replace it."
SCHIZOPHRENIA
* An estimated 12,000 New Zealanders are affected by schizophrenia at
some point in their lives. It has been described as a group of psychotic
illnesses characterised by disturbances of thinking, emotional reaction and
behaviour.
* It can involve hallucinations and delusions.
By: Martin Johnston
Source: nzherald
Last updated: 11/07
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