Taking Aim
Together

continued
SEEING THE WHOLE PERSON
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“If you ask people with schizophrenia what they want, they’d say they
want more money so they can live in a better place, buy a decent car and
Christmas presents, or they want a girlfriend,” says Dr. Diamond.
Physicians’ heavy-handed attempts to dispel all their patients’
“delusions” or silence their voices can be counterproductive.
“Look at all those researchers at the university who work all their lives
thinking they’ll win a Nobel Prize. They know, on some level, they’re not
going to win the Nobel. But if they didn’t have the delusion that they
could, they might lose the initiative to do their work.”
And he believes that a lack of initiative, for those with schizophrenia,
is often more debilitating than hearing voices.” People can hear voices and
still be fully functional.”
The important thing for doctors, he said, is to understand how their
patients feel about the voices.
“For the most part, people don’t like hearing voices. They’re intrusive.
One patient described her voices like this: ‘Imagine your teenage daughter
had control of a radio in your head, and she controlled the volume and the
station.’ ”
On the other hand, there are patients who like the voices they hear.
“Some voices are upbeat, they give advice and they make the person feel less
isolated. Either the voices are a problem, or they’re not. We have to
listen, and find out what’s going on.”
Doctors also have to listen to consumers’ feelings about the social
fallout that can result from prescription medicines. What’s an acceptable
amount of weight gain? How do they feel about decreased sexual function? And
what about the effort that goes into consuming large quantities of pills?
“For some people, taking a pill is a symbol of what they’re fighting for.
For others, it’s a remembrance of what they’ve lost. Some are reminded by a
pill that what’s happened to them is not their fault. And some see it as a
condemnation.
“Because more doctors are working in community settings, they are
starting to see their patient as a whole person, a person whose goals change
over time,” Dr. Diamond said. “This survey is one more piece in what is
becoming a larger dialogue about what ‘getting better’ really means.”
© 2005 Schizophrenia Digest. Reprinted with
permission.
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