Schizophrenia is a chronic mental disorder characterized by distorted thinking, perceptions, emotions, language, sense of self, and behavior. Common symptoms include hallucinations, delusions, disorganized thinking, and impaired functioning.
It is one of the most stigmatized mental health conditions. Despite widespread awareness, few truly understand it.
Schizophrenia Statistics
- Global Prevalence: 1% of the population, over 20 million people.
- EU Prevalence: Around 5 million people.
- Age of Onset: Higher likelihood between ages 18 and 28.
- Gender Differences: 40% of men show early symptoms before age 20.
- Comorbidity: 50% also suffer from depression.
- Suicide Risk: Over 5% commit suicide.
The Stigma Surrounding Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia carries significant stigma worldwide, leading to severe consequences for those affected, including social exclusion and mistreatment. It’s crucial to understand what schizophrenia really is and dispel common myths.
Even within the medical community, a lack of understanding often leads to fear and avoidance of patients with schizophrenia, perpetuating the stigma. This can result in overmedication, rough treatment, and a loss of hope for those affected.
The media often misrepresents schizophrenia, depicting individuals with the condition as having multiple personalities or as being dangerous, which only fuels public fear and misunderstanding.
Common Misconceptions About Schizophrenia
This experience and the people living it are very stigmatized all around the world. This can have a huge impact on the person’s life, from being socially excluded, to chained to trees or locked in cages like animals for years!
It is time to bring light to what really is schizophrenia and maybe even more to what it is not.
The particularity of this experience, as maybe with bipolar disorder, is that even in the medical world, professionals are very uneducated about it, leading them to being afraid and avoiding these patients. In turn, this keeps the stigma even more alive. It also leads to internalized patients going through traumatizing experiences. Often, they will be numbed with over–medication, treated roughly (to not say badly) and all hope for a better future will be reduced to nothing.
Also, schizophrenia has been used a lot in the media as an (reason) excuse to dangerous behaviors or as the reason for someone to become the “bad guy” in a TV show or movie. It has been portrayed over and over again as an illness leading to people having multiple personalities and there’s always one of them that is very dangerous. Or it has been used as the reason why someone attacked someone else or made a terrorist act.
Many beliefs about schizophrenia are considered as facts in nowadays societies and they are passed on to us by the people around us and the media. This leads to stigmatizing this experience and makes it even harder to understand it and increases the risk of negative consequences like shame, not asking for help and/or suicide.
The first belief is that someone who lives with schizophrenia has multiple personalities, or in other words a split personality. This is called multiple personality disorder or dissociative identity disorder and it is a completely different experience. People living with Schizophrenia do not have different personalities, they experience what we call positive (e.g. hallucinations, delusions…) and negative symptoms (e.g. lack of motivation, isolation…).
Another common belief is that people living with schizophrenia will never be able to recover and to live a normal life. Someone with schizophrenia can live a life without symptoms or more exactly, with controlled symptoms. This means that their experience is under control and even If they might need medication for the rest of their life, this is not so different from hypothyroidism or diabetes for example. (see MISTAG interviews to see recovery experiences).
As said earlier, another misbelief is that people living with schizophrenia are dangerous. Now, to clarify this, only a minority of people living with Schizophrenia are dangerous, the same way that only a minority of men are violent. The opposite is actually more often the case: people living with Schizophrenia have are at a higher risk of being the victim of violence. You have more chances to be attacked by someone under the influence of alcohol or drugs than by someone going through a schizophrenic episode.
I also hear very often that the risk with Schizophrenia is that the people experiencing it are very unpredictable as they might enter in a crisis at any moment. This is also a misunderstanding of the experience, the normal development of a psychotic episode takes time (sometimes months) where the person first stops taking care of themselves, stops their social activities, isolate themselves (i.e. apparition of the negative symptoms) and then a stressor like a difficult life event will be the trigger to the positive symptoms.
The last fact that is actually a myth is that people with Schizophrenia should stay for a really long time in psychiatric care if they want to have a chance to come back to normal. Actually, it has been proven that long term hospitalization is wrong for people going through a mental illness experience. Nowadays more and more studies show that home care and peer–support are more adapted than hospitalization and prevent the person from losing their job, friends etc.
What Is Schizophrenia?
The American Psychiatric Association (APA) defines schizophrenia as “a chronic brain disorder” affecting a person’s perception of reality. Symptoms are categorized into:
- Positive (Psychotic) Symptoms: Hallucinations and delusions.
- Negative Symptoms: Difficulty expressing emotions and engaging socially.
- Disorganization Symptoms: Uncontrolled movements and incoherent speech.
- Impaired Cognition: Issues with concentration and memory.
Symptoms vary in duration and severity among individuals, but the likelihood of severe psychotic episodes decreases over time.
Causes of Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia may result from various factors, including:
- Genetics: Family history increases the risk.
- Environmental Factors: Prenatal exposure to viruses and malnutrition.
- Brain Malfunction: Issues with neurotransmitters.
- Substance Abuse: Drug use in adolescence increases the risk.
People with schizophrenia are also more likely to experience other mental health conditions, such as PTSD, OCD, and substance abuse.
Understanding and addressing the stigma and misconceptions surrounding schizophrenia is essential for improving the lives of those affected by this condition.
