Living With Schizoaffective Disorder
A Poorly Understood Condition
I've been writing online about my illness for a number of years. In most
of what I have written, I referred to my illness as
manic depression, also
known as bipolar depression.
But that's not quite the right name for it. The reason I say I'm
manic-depressive is that very few people have any idea
what schizoaffective
disorder is - not even many mental health professionals. Most people have at
least heard of manic depression, and many have a pretty good idea of what it
is. Bipolar depression is very well known to both psychologists and
psychiatrists, and can often be effectively treated.
I tried to research schizoaffective disorder online a few years ago, and
also pressed my doctors for details so I could understand my condition
better. The best anyone could say to me is that
schizoaffective disorder is "poorly understood".
Schizoaffective disorder is one of the rarer forms of mental illness, and
has not been the subject of much clinical study. To my knowledge there are
no medications that are specifically meant to treat it - instead one uses a
combination of the drugs used for manic depression and schizophrenia. (As I
will explain later, while some might disagree with me, I feel it is also
critically important to undergo psychotherapy.)
The doctors at the hospital where I was diagnosed seemed to be quite
confused by the symptoms I was exhibiting. I had expected to stay only a few
days, but they wanted to keep me much longer because they told me that they
did not understand what was going on with me and wanted to observe me for an
extended time so they could figure it out.
Although schizophrenia is a very familiar illness to any psychiatrist, my
psychiatrist seemed to find it very disturbing that I was
hearing voices. If
I had not been hallucinating, he would have been very comfortable diagnosing
and treating me as bipolar. While they seemed certain of my eventual
diagnosis, the impression I got from my stay at the hospital was that none
of the staff had ever seen anyone with schizoaffective disorder before.
There is some controversy as to whether it is a real illness at all. Is
schizoaffective disorder a distinct condition, or is it the unlucky
coincidence of two different diseases? When
The Quiet Room author
Lori Schiller was diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder, her parents
protested that the doctors really didn't know what was wrong with their
daughter, saying that schizoaffective disorder was just a catch-all
diagnosis that the doctors used because they had no real understanding of
her condition.
Probably the best argument I've heard that schizoaffective disorder is a
distinct illness is the observation that schizoaffectives tend to do better
in their lives than schizophrenics tend to do.
But that is not a very satisfying argument. I, for one, would like to
understand my illness better and I would like those from whom I seek
treatment to understand it better. That can only be possible if
schizoaffective disorder were to get more attention from the clinical
research community.
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