¶ … etiology of schizophrenia and the ways in which researchers, psychologists, philosophers, and different cultures in different ages have attempted to understand the disease. It also examines the prevalence of schizophrenia on both a global and domestic front and discusses it in terms of individual patients according to age, gender and ethnicity. Finally it examines the disease from the standpoint of diagnostic criteria as well as evidence-based treatments and what the dropout rate of each might signify. It concludes by asserting that researchers may benefit from approaching schizophrenia from a sociological perspective since the psychosocial therapy appears to have the best clinical results and lowest dropout rate among the various treatments available.
Schizophrenia
Introduction
Eugene Blueler first used the term "schizophrenia" in the early 20th century as a means of re-defining what earlier psychologists had described as a form of dementia. Blueler's term described a "split mind" -- a phenomenon that was not new to the world but in fact had existed for thousands of years (Kyziridis, 2005). Cultures and societies as disparate as the ancient Chinese and the ancient Romans had attempted to identify, understand and treat the mental or, as some philosophers called it, spiritual sickness. Thus, techniques, treatments, and discussions of the phenomenon that today is classified as "schizophrenia" have differed over time and place throughout all history. This paper will discuss what researchers now state regarding the etiology of schizophrenia, the prevalence of the sickness, the modern diagnostic criteria, and the evidence-based treatments used.
Etiology
The most comprehensive etiological examination of schizophrenia will incorporate the historical perspective as well as the modern academic perspective. To limit one's analysis to the Bleuler or Kraepelin school is to dismiss the thousands of years of critical scrutiny prior.
The ancient Egyptians viewed mental disease as a physical illness, while Plato and the ancient Chinese understood psychotic episodes as a consequences of spiritual disturbances (Kyziridis, 2005, p. 42-3). The ancient Hindu texts associate mental health with a balance of spiritual and physical health, and the Middle Ages saw various approaches to mental disorders, indicating that causes were believed to be physical, psychological, and spiritual.
Freud attempted to interpret a cause for the split mind phenomenon by stressing a relationship "between family dynamics and schizophrenia" (Kyziridis, 2005, p. 46), while modern researchers, such as Dr. Nimgaonkar (2006) at the University of Pittsburgh, focus on genetic causes, and others, like Marenco and Weinberger (2000) focus on schizophrenia's cause being found in utero (p. 501). Nimgaonkar (2006) states that "literally hundreds of causes have been proposed" but that the best theory of etiology is hereditary, suggesting that the root cause of schizophrenia is biological.
McGuire, David, et al. (1995), state that "auditory verbal hallucinations ('voices') are thought to arise from a disorder of inner speech (thinking in words)," indicating that this particular sign of schizophrenia points to a physiological cause. The "predisposition to verbal hallucinations is associated with a failure to activate areas concerned with the monitoring of inner speech," which is situated in the physiology of the brain (p. 596). When looking at the "the neural correlates of tasks which involve inner speech in subjects with schizophrenia who hear voices (hallucinators)," as well as nonhallucinators, McGuire et al. determined that the flow of blood in the brain differed in the two during thought processes.
Thus, the etiology of schizophrenia continues to be unknown, though theories vary widely about its origins and causes.
Prevalence
Part of the problem of discussing the prevalence of schizophrenia is that it can often be misdiagnosed. Because its symptoms at various stages of development are similar to those of other mental diseases, the diagnosis of schizophrenia can be hard to make. Different cultures as well have a different view of diagnosis and treatment, and therefore there is no uniform approach schizophrenia across the globe.
For instance, a study based on the long-term survey of schizophrenia in over a dozen countries by the World Health Organization found "that patients in countries outside Europe and the United States have a more favorable short- and medium-term course of the disease than those seen in developed countries" (Sartorius, Gulbinat, Harrison, Laska, Siegel 1996, p. 249). The study indicates that the prevalence of schizophrenia at the end of the 20th century appears to be far greater in the Western world than in the non-Western world, where cultural norms and values are different, and diagnostic methods and treatments...
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