Schizophrenia Definition: The inability to distinguish what is real from what is imaginary 2.5 million Americans suffer from Schizophrenia About 1 percent.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Schizophrenia What is schizophrenia?  Most disabling and chronic of all mental illnesses  Psychosis: type of mental illness- cannot distinguish reality.
Advertisements

Watch the clip You tube You tube Gerald – schizophrenia Gerald – schizophrenia Heather – schizophrenia Heather – schizophrenia Real life case studies….
Ψ CDA PSYCHOLOGY UNIT Ψ RECOGNIZES WORLD MENTAL HEALTH DAY 2014!
Schizophrenia and other Psychotic Disorders
COMMITMENT 1. CIVIL COMMITMENT – COMMITTMENT BECAUSE OF MENTAL ILLNESS ITSELF 2. CRIMINAL COMMITMENT – COMMITMENT BECAUSE NGRI (NOT GUILTY BY REASON.
Assessment and Differential Diagnosis of Abnormal Experience
Schizophrenia Human Behavior. Common Misconception… People who have schizophrenia do not have multiple personalities or a split personality They are.
Schizophrenia Disorders sec 7. objectives Define schizophrenia List the symptoms of schizophrenia (5) List contributing factors (5)
Electroconvulsive Therapy: the history, how it works and a look at the anti-ECT movement A presentation by Jennifer C. Long.
Mental Disorders. Each year, roughly 22 percent of the adult U.S. population has a diagnosable mental disorder. In the U.S., half of the people suffering.
Schizoaffective Disorder What is it? How does it affect the person diagnosed? How is it dealt with? What is it? How does it affect the person diagnosed?
Chapter Fifteen Alcoholism, Mood Disorders, and Schizophrenia.
SCHIZOPHRENIA Literally means “Split or Broken Mind” The split is from Reality It is a severe form of psychopathology in which the person seems to disintegrate.
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Lizzie Lohrer. What is it?  Also known as OCD  Unreasonable thoughts and/or repetitive behaviors  Trying to suppress.
Schizophrenia Source: tions/schizophrenia/complete- index.shtml Copyright © Notice: The materials are copyrighted © and.
S. Jett, NBCT MMS Physical Education.  M&E Disorder 1. Anxiety Disorder 2. Depression 3. Bipolar Disorder 4. Conduct Disorder 5. Eating Disorders 6.
Schizophrenia. Basics Schizophrenia is a severe and disabling brain disorder that has effected people throughout history People with this disorder may:
Schizophrenia is a lifelong brain disorder in which individuals have trouble distinguishing real and unreal experiences, concentrating, socializing and.
Announcements  Psychological Disorders—this week  Today  How do we define “abnormal?”  Schizophrenia  Thursday  Mood Disorders  Anxiety Disorders.
What is psychosis? D B Double
Schizophrenia By Azlynn Williams Block 4 3/3. What is this disease??? When you think of crazy, you think of Schizophrenia.
Mood Disorders Mood Disorders –Many people have ups and downs –But some people have mood swings that are not appropriate for the situation.
Chapter 6 Mental and Emotional Disorders Lesson 1 Mental and Emotional Disorders.
Categorize the following disorders as anxiety, mood, dissociative, or somatoform. Arachnophobia Depression PTSD Dissociative Identity Disorder Hypochondria.
Chapter Fifteen Alcoholism, Mood Disorders, and Schizophrenia.
Top ten myths about mental illness. Myth #1: Psychiatric disorders are not true medical illnesses Like heart disease and diabetes. People who have a mental.
Psychiatry Study, Treatment, & prevention of mental disorders.
Section 7: Common Disorders in Adults
Schizophrenia Terrence Gault.
Schizophrenia Chapter 11. Schizophrenia A severe and chronic psychological disorder characterized by disturbances in thinking, perception, emotions and.
Schizophrenia A thought Disorder A thought Disorder.
Schizophrenia. Schizophrenia The MOST serious of all psychological disorders. Loss of contact with reality Can make it impossible for a person to function.
Dissociative Disorders Dissociative Amnesia Dissociative Identity Disorder Depersonalization-Derealization Disorder.
The term schizophrenia comes from two Greek words that mean splitting apart of mental functions. “Split mind“ U-Ajwbok&sns=em.
Schizophrenia A. Two or more of the following, each present for a significant portion of the time during a 1-month period** 1. Delusions 2. Hallucinations.
SCHIZOPHRENIA 2 nd most frequent diagnosis of patients y/o.
Schizophrenia Chapter 18 Section 6. What is Schizophrenia Distortion/disturbance of cognition, emotions, perception, and motor functions. Schizophrenics.
By Nora Gonzalez Period 5 Schizophrenia. Discussion Question: Define Schizophrenia.
Schizophrenia. A. Two or more of the following, each present for a significant portion of the time during a 1-month period** 1. Delusions 2. Hallucinations.
Rose McClung and Emmie Gerrard.  Schizophrenia is a disorder of the brain which may cause severe symptoms. Most cases of schizophrenia are life-long,
Amber Keller Psychology major. Raise Mental Health Awareness: Break the Stigma! Schizophrenia.
Schizophrenia True or False?  Schizophrenia exists in the same form in every culture that has been studied.  Visual hallucinations (“seeing things”)
Schizophrenia is a long term mental disorder of a type involving a break down, in a relation between thought, emotion, and behaviour, leading to faulty.
By David Gallegos Period 7.  What are the Causes and Symptoms of Schizophrenia ?  How do people who have Schizophrenia live with it and how is it treated?
What is Bipolar? Bipolar is when you suffer from extreme exaggerated changes of your mood, you go from extreme highs to extreme lows very quickly. The.
Schizophrenia CP Psychology Mrs. Bradley What is Schizophrenia?  A mental condition involving distorted perceptions of reality and an inability to function.
SCHIZOPHRENIA Rogelio Navarro. ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS  What are the different types of schizophrenia and the treatments?  What are the similarities and.
Schizophrenia & Psychosis. Psychosis The word "psychosis" is used to describe conditions that affect the mind, in which there has been some loss of contact.
Module 51: Schizophrenia Abnormal Psychology Unit 13.
 What are mental & emotional disorders?  Causes of mental & emotional disorders  Vocabulary.
Disability Services.  Severe mental disorders that cause abnormal thinking and perceptions.  The two main symptoms include: delusions and hallucinations.
The biological approach and treatments AS Psychology, AQA A, unit 2- individual differences (psychopathology)
SCHIZOPHRENIA. TYPES Disorganized: -Incoherent Speech -Hallucinations -Bizzare Behavior -DelusionsCatatonic:-Stuporor -Extreme Excitement Paranoid: -Illogical.
Schizophrenia Ariana Sanchez. Mental illness So I decided to do my topic on this mental illness that is common Schizophrenia is one of the most common.
Schizophrenia LO: to know what it is and what it looks like!!
By: Sheryl Acuna, Neil de Guzman, Joyce Hu, Andy Kim, Austin Harcarik.
PSYCHOTIC DISORDER Mental Health First Aid By Mental Health Commission of Canada, 2010.
Mental Health Unit 3
Bell Ringer 1. Bipolar Disorder 2. Major Depressive Disorder 3. Depression a. A down in the dumps mood that lasts for over 2 years. b. Sadness, hopeless,
Schizophrenia and Personality Disorders. Schizophrenia Characterized by a loss of touch with reality Usually develops in early adulthood Symptoms include:
Chris Allred NS 215 ?id= &page=1&CMP=O TC-RSSFeeds0312.
Ch. 19 S. 5 : Biological Therapy
Schizophrenia: an inside view
Schizophrenia Paranoid by The Jonas Brothers
Schizophrenia & Psychosis
You’re the Psychologist…
Schizophrenia By: Alexandra Fratzke Armyn Padilla Cecilia Roque
Schizophrenia Human Behavior.
Schizophrenia.
The Soloist.
Presentation transcript:

Schizophrenia Definition: The inability to distinguish what is real from what is imaginary 2.5 million Americans suffer from Schizophrenia About 1 percent of the population has Schizophrenia Neither doctors nor scientist can accurately predict who will get the disease The cause is largely unknown, although the disease almost surely arises from neurons that take a wrong turn during fetal development Strikes most people right before adulthood

Schizophrenia Symptoms: -Delusions -Hallucinations -Frequent incoherent speech -Absence of feeling -Men typically lose their libido Catatonic Schizophrenia: Patient often seems to be in a stupor, resisting all requests and instructions, or engages in purposeless movements, bizarre postures, exaggerated mannerisms or grimacing. Paranoid Schizophrenia: The patient becomes convinced of beliefs at odds with reality, hears voices that aren't there or sees images that exist no where but in his/her mind.

Schizophrenia Andrea Yates: Confessed to drowning her 5 children one by one in a bathtub in John Nash: Won the Nobel Prize for Economics in 1994

Schizophrenia Andrea Yates: –Drowned her 5 children one by one in 2001 –Prison psychiatrist diagnosed her as having postpartum depression –Psychosis: The inability to distinguish reality from imagination lies at the core of Schizophrenia –In 1994, after her first child was born, she said she heard Satan’s voice telling her to kill baby Noah…

Schizophrenia Andrea Yates: Found not guilty –Jury found that she was legally insane when she drowned her 5 children –"She needs help," the jury foreman said at a post-verdict press briefing. "Although she's being treated, I think she's worse than she was before. I think she'll probably need treatment for the rest for her life."

Schizophrenia and Religion “The seeming authenticity of the voices means that people with Schizophrenia can be barraged by commands that, they are convinced come from God or Satan.” If you are truly a religious believer, this inference is not illogical. Who else can speak to you, unseen, from inside your head? Andrea Yates, believing she was possessed by Satan, thought that her children “were not righteous.” If she killed them when they were young, then God would take them up to heaven.

Schizophrenia and Religion There is no evidence that people with Schizophrenia have impaired moral judgments. Then why do some obey commands to break the law or even worse? “Perhaps one need look no further than Genesis 22, when Abraham heard God’s command to sacrifice his only son, Isaac, he did not hesitate to take the boy up to the mountain to the place of sacrifice and raise the knife.”

Schizophrenia John Nash: –According to Dr. Nancy Andreessen, professor of psychiatry at the University of Iowa, the disease, in its early stages, can inspire Olympian leaps of creativity and insight –“ People don’t see things others don’t, most of which aren't there. But because they perceive the world in a different way, they also sometimes notice things, real things, that normal people don’t.”

Electroshock Therapy Almost always used as a last resort to treat patients suffering from severe depression, bipolar disorder, or schizophrenia These patients have had no success with antidepressants or mood stabilizing medications The patient is always anesthetized An electric current shoots through the brain causing a brief 20 second seizure

How/Why it works… Psychiatrists/Neuroscientists aren’t exactly sure… Theories: –1. Neurotransmitter Theory: Shock works like an antidepressant medication, changes the way the brain receives important mood related chemicals such as serotonin, dopamine, and Norepinephrine. –2. Neuroendocrine Theory: Seizures actually help the hypothalamus release hormones throughout the body responsible for mood –3. Brain Damage Theory: Damages the brain, causing memory loss and disorientation that creates an illusion that problems are gone Memory loss is the #1 side effect

The Big Debate Success rate is 80% compared to antidepressant medication (50%-60%) Today most psychiatrists recommend a combination of electroshock and medication Treatment always used as a last resort, patient must give informed consent or permission to use the therapy must come from a court ordered psychiatrist Critics see the therapy as a “temporary fix” not a permanent solution