Schizoaffective Disorder
Medical Treatment for Schizoaffective Disorder
Basic Principles
Both drug and psychosocial therapies are necessary to successfully
treat schizoaffective disorder. Because of the unemployment, poverty, and
homelessness that often complicates schizoaffective disorder,
drug therapy
alone usually is insufficient. Drug therapy usually can stop the patient's
psychosis, but often only social and occupational rehabilitation therapies
can overcome the associated unemployment, poverty and homelessness.
Recovering from schizoaffective disorder is an extremely lonely experience,
and these patients require all the support that their families, friends, and
communities can provide.
Schizoaffective disorder appears to be a combination of a thought
disorder, mood disorder, and anxiety disorder. Thus the medical management
of schizoaffective disorder often requires a combination of
antipsychotic,
antidepressant, and antianxiety medication. Unfortunately, after the first
year of treatment, only a minority of schizoaffective outpatients remain on
their oral medications. Thus long-acting, depot antipsychotic medications
that last 2-4 weeks between injections (e.g., depot haloperidol, pipotiazine,
or fluphenazine) usually are required to overcome this noncompliance
problem.
Treatment of an acutely psychotic patient often requires
psychiatric
hospitalization. The presence of adequate family or social supports will
often shorten the length of this hospitalization, or permit the psychotic
patient to be treated solely on an outpatient basis.
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