Meds Keep
Schizophrenia at Bay
(March 25, 2006) -- If it wasn't for his
schizophrenia medication, Austin Mardon says he'd be "eating garbage on
97 Street - if I wasn't dead."
The PhD and Antarctic explorer was diagnosed with
schizophrenia in 1992 at the age of 30. Now he's participating in a
clinical trial that makes it even easier for schizophrenics to stay on their
meds ... and out of hospitals and jails.
Dr. Pierre Chue, associate professor at the University of Alberta
hospital, said there are an estimated 30,000 Albertans currently suffering
with schizophrenia, with about one third living right here in Edmonton.
"It certainly speaks to the fact that schizophrenia is more common than
people think," he said.
A new Canadian report called the Economic Burden of Schizophrenia in
Canada in 2004: Current Medical Research and Opinion shows the national cost
of treating the disease in 2004 reached $1.2 billion.
Chue said a large part of that comes from the hospitalization - with
schizophrenia patients in Alberta spending a combined 180,000 days in
hospital in 2002 - of people not taking their medication and relapsing in
their psychosis.
"It's critical that they take all their medication, but the most common
symptom of schizophrenia is the belief that nothing is wrong with them at
all," Chue said.
He also said there are new drugs available that will help with that
problem, but aren't yet approved.
One of those drugs is Respiradol, which Mardon is taking on a trial basis.
It reportedly can be injected every two weeks rather than being taken every
day, reducing the chances of sufferers going off their medication.
"I have been cursed with schizophrenia, but I have been blessed with the
insight to co-operate with my doctors no matter how difficult it is," said
Mardon, a volunteer with the Canadian Mental Health Association, the
Champions Centre and the Schizophrenia Society of Alberta.
Source: Edmonton Sun
Last updated: 3/06
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