Schizophrenia

2405 Words5 Pages

Schizophrenia

Schizophrenia is a specific type of psychosis. It is a disorder distinguished by disturbances within thought patterns, attention and also emotion. It can also result in a complete lack of emotional expressiveness, or on occasions inappropriate ones. Every now and then it may cause disturbances in the patient’s movement and or behaviour, resulting in an unkempt appearance.

For quite a long time schizophrenia was perceived as a ‘functional disorder’ with some doctors saying it was a ‘sociological phenomenon’ (Gelder et al 1989) meaning’ patients with schizophrenia are normal people who are driven insane by an insane world’.

Schizophrenics may often be withdrawn from other people and usual everyday reality, frequently into a life of strange delusions and hallucinations. Schizophrenia is known to cause such huge disruption within that person’s life that it is unsurprising that it has been very difficult to find out what the underlying causes of the disorder are and to develop methods to try and treat it. There is still a long road to travel before anyone understands the various factors that trigger schizophrenia

. There are many treatments but ones that are effective as well as having no undesirable side effects are yet to be found, although the efficiency of some antipsychotic drugs and current advancement in biological research has actually countered this 70’s concept. Revolutionary scientific progression in neuroscience, genetics, brain imaging and molecular biology over the years has now supplied dependable and conclusive evidence for the biological bases that underlie schizophrenia.

Because of the severity of schizophrenic symptoms it makes finding or keeping employment very difficult. Unusual behaviour an...

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http://www.nhs.uk/Conditions/Schizophrenia/Pages/Symptoms.aspx?WT.srch=1&gclid=CMXa77fqvZ8CFaFi4wodwE-X0A

Accessed on 29/12/2009

NHS 2009

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London: Hodder &Stoughton

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http://www.nhs.uk/Conditions/Schizophrenia/Pages/Symptoms.aspx?WT.srch=1&gclid=CMXa77fqvZ8CFaFi4wodwE-X0A

Accessed on 29/12/2009

NHS 2009

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