Schizophrenia: Neurotransmitter Tracts, Causes, Treatment & Assessment - Psychiatry | Lecturio

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  • Опубликовано: 8 май 2024
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    This video “Schizophrenia” is part of the Lecturio course ““Psychiatry” ► WATCH the complete course on lectur.io/schizo
    ► LEARN ABOUT:
    - Neurotransmitter Tracts
    - Causes
    - Treatment
    - Assessment
    ► THE PROF:
    Dr. Farrell is a Harvard Medical School faculty member and board certified psychiatrist with a private practice in Boston. She has experience in patient care, teaching and in treating psychological disorders in various settings, including the Emergency Department, inpatient units and outpatient settings.
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    0:00 Introduction
    1:44 Neurotransmitter Tracts
    5:28 Neuroimaging Study Finding
    6:25 Strongest Predictor
    9:58 Case Study: Delusional College Student
    11:45 Risk Factors for Suicide
    13:00 Schizophrenia Assessment
    17:18 Prognostic Factors
    21:07 Group Therapy

Комментарии • 290

  • @TheoDGoodman
    @TheoDGoodman 4 года назад +82

    I was born in the winter, and had my first episode at`17. This is the best video on schizophrenia I've seen.

    • @okidoki3201
      @okidoki3201 3 года назад +1

      Get a UVB lamp and eat cod liver oil

    • @aaymathebest4705
      @aaymathebest4705 3 года назад +3

      @@okidoki3201 can you tell me what is UVB lamp.?

    • @okidoki3201
      @okidoki3201 3 года назад +2

      @@aaymathebest4705 a lamp helping you make vitamin D.
      Schizofreni is gut bacteria and infections.
      Magnesium zink and vitamin D to prevent episodes .
      Cut out gluten to kill the bad bugs.
      During attack use antibiotics

    • @aaymathebest4705
      @aaymathebest4705 3 года назад +3

      @@okidoki3201 anti- biotics work on infection like chest infection,when any infection happened in the body...anti- phsycotics phsyciatrist gives in case of sczophernia,in different type of phsycotics illnesses.....

    • @okidoki3201
      @okidoki3201 3 года назад +1

      @@aaymathebest4705 shchizo is infection. Look at germany studies

  • @jqnpk3
    @jqnpk3 4 года назад +7

    Your videos are so professional and helpful.

  • @ia9786
    @ia9786 3 года назад +25

    Thank you! I am a psychologist and I found this video very useful and it was presented quite concisely.

    • @alirahman685
      @alirahman685 2 года назад

      Very informative and academic

    • @sarfrazakhtar4979
      @sarfrazakhtar4979 Год назад

      Please tell me olanex f is good for treatment of schizophrenia?

  • @Channy22able
    @Channy22able 5 лет назад +11

    I like your video. A very clear and structured way of transfering information. And with interactive questions it's even better. But I would like for a slowet pace. Pauses between slides, where the slide is still shown giving the listener the opportunity to comsume the written information after focussing on the spoken verbal information. Pauses not too long gets the listener relaxed instead of focusing constantly affraid to miss a beat. This is my opinion anyway. Sorry for my english grammer for I am not a native speaker. Another reason to not necessarily slow things down but pace your speech.

  • @Spamhero
    @Spamhero Год назад +2

    In 1992 a psychiatrist working in mental hospital stated on horizon a science programme on television that a person hearing voices was by definition psychotic and unable to lead an independent life. By that time I had been hearing voices for twenty years..I was living an independent life for the previous twelve years. People are different and responses vary.
    Treatment has to progress .All I can say that compared to 1972 people talk about schizophrenia

  • @cathleenkealey7451
    @cathleenkealey7451 2 года назад +3

    Excellent presentation. Concise and calm.

  • @alirahman685
    @alirahman685 2 года назад +2

    I am a medical doctor and Speech language pathologist...I found this video very beneficial and academic

  • @ceciliawangui5505
    @ceciliawangui5505 2 года назад +4

    Wonderful presentation and very informative. Thank you so much.

  • @kimt8162
    @kimt8162 2 года назад +30

    We had a "nervous breakdown" with my daughter. For 30 days, we are doing all the medication. I'm not quick to say schizophrenia because college age. When I went to visit her in the hospital, almost every person coming out with her was of that age. I'm starting to think college is just so stressful, these kids are having episodes of well, detachment from home mixed in with tons of stress. I think maybe we need to rethink college and how those things are done in a college setting.

    • @bumperbilly
      @bumperbilly Год назад +9

      The age range found in college students coincides with the most common ages for having initial psychotic breakdown, weather or not one is in college. Best of everything for your family and your daughter. If she is indeed schizophrenic getting the right help and staying on the correct medication is crucial. Every breakdown brings some rearrangement (damage) to the brain; reduce the number of psychotic episodes = reduce the damage that would be cumulative over life span.

    • @onceuponanexploration6048
      @onceuponanexploration6048 Год назад +3

      The society glorifies college because we all have a vested interest in people getting educated, exploring, etc. but the truth is there are a multitude of extremely toxic elements at college. Every time I see one of those extreme hazing incidents or other horrendous incident, I think of how Bill Maher put it, "major a--hole factories" of America.

    • @jilla-dr9hu
      @jilla-dr9hu Год назад +2

      There’s always part time college and doing it virtually. If she is up at night studying at all hours and not sleeping enough it can cause hallucinations and paranoia. I been there

    • @kennethmbox
      @kennethmbox 8 месяцев назад

      Pls follow Dr Abram Hoffer’s curing protocol to save your daughter

    • @tauresattauresa7137
      @tauresattauresa7137 4 месяца назад

      Not all courses are available online sadly. But a lot of not all should be ​@@jilla-dr9hu

  • @jonahmunene646
    @jonahmunene646 3 года назад +1

    Excellent vivid descriptive lecture..thanks Daktari

  • @jmk1962
    @jmk1962 4 года назад +5

    Incredibly interesting. Thank you.

  • @HepziB
    @HepziB 3 года назад +2

    The thumbnail is perfect! Because my mom's face transformed just like this when she was diagnosed.

  • @jamiemsorenson7426
    @jamiemsorenson7426 4 года назад +3

    Great educational value! Thank You

  • @whiteshadow59
    @whiteshadow59 4 года назад +5

    thanks for the video, good host

  • @beverlyanderson9840
    @beverlyanderson9840 4 года назад +8

    Dear Dr. please make more videos on bipolar 2 MDD, Persistent Depressive Disorder psychosis I would appreciate this

  • @nataliam5744
    @nataliam5744 Год назад

    Extremely informative material. Thank you for that, Doctor :)

  • @everlyneachieng5927
    @everlyneachieng5927 4 года назад +23

    A perfect lecture, well explained, I wouldn't trade it for anything

    • @Titbitist
      @Titbitist 2 года назад

      1,000,000,000,000,000 dollars

  • @foursite
    @foursite 5 лет назад +3

    Excellent!!

  • @amakaottih8644
    @amakaottih8644 5 лет назад +1

    This video help me with my neclx pn thank u

  • @caleuxx9108
    @caleuxx9108 2 года назад +6

    besides the delusions, halucinations and disorganized thoughts, to me the symptoms seem to overlap with cPTSD symptoms (withdrawal, etc.). George Simon wrote books about Covert aggression causing anxiety, fear and mistrust.

  • @Bibiznatch
    @Bibiznatch 2 года назад +4

    C reactive proteins are elevated in people with schizophrenia. Some type of inflammation going on for whatever reason, possibly a primary causation with schizophrenia being a secondary result.

  • @eboniezollicoffer7096
    @eboniezollicoffer7096 2 года назад

    Excellent learning tool

  • @ahmedmakbool6581
    @ahmedmakbool6581 3 года назад +9

    Your way in speaking is very very gorgeous and fabulous, omg!

  • @samanthagabbidon6235
    @samanthagabbidon6235 4 года назад +15

    Studies of schizophrenia where the body is deficient in b3, chlorine, omega 3.

  • @ezenlepchaezenlepcha9770
    @ezenlepchaezenlepcha9770 Год назад

    Amazing and Rock on!!...Cali here 🎉

  • @sassytee0722
    @sassytee0722 6 лет назад +1

    Great review. Thxs for sharing 😊

  • @-Aurumn-
    @-Aurumn- Год назад +3

    I thought I had schizophrenia, but I think I just drank too much coffee.

  • @sarahdrio4623
    @sarahdrio4623 3 года назад +1

    Interesting!

  • @idamkoyu7471
    @idamkoyu7471 4 года назад

    What is the best treatment for them.you hav'nt shown in video

  • @jamescolm7018
    @jamescolm7018 3 года назад +1

    Where can I find references for this presentation?

  • @Hammerzippy
    @Hammerzippy 2 года назад +4

    Is there any help for the people that suffer from these symptoms?
    The medications seem to not work very well and have awful side effects.
    When a large precentage of the people suffering from this are commiting suicide....
    The current help isn't helping.
    More needs to be done.
    So many charities and funds gathered to find a cure for cancer. There needs to be more research done on Mental health.
    This is very depressing.
    I feel for anyone suffering from this. My uncle being one of them. He was told the trauma he endured during being in War is what gave him schizophrenia.
    So this is something someone can catch or get? There has to be better help for all mental illness.

    • @sarfrazakhtar4979
      @sarfrazakhtar4979 Год назад

      Yes I agree to you and all should be because life of a schizophrenic isn't good no one respect them they don't have peace of mind and they think that they should marry or not because no one will want it to them their friends make fun of them in the group they don't feel good in the end their is nothing for them except tears 🥺 there should be more research on it

  • @rorothings5549
    @rorothings5549 4 года назад +6

    May I know what book or the source for this lecture? I am hoping I can read the book on my own since this is my way of learning :)

    • @cellineancheta8338
      @cellineancheta8338 3 года назад +5

      It’s all in kaplan psychiatry by sadocks

    • @rorothings5549
      @rorothings5549 3 года назад +1

      @@cellineancheta8338 I see. Thank you v much!

    • @imransaugg
      @imransaugg 2 года назад

      Antisocial Personality Disorder ruclips.net/video/zoETiceo4U8/видео.html

  • @carl___________
    @carl___________ 4 года назад +1

    Idk if I am just over stressing about it. Like I don’t think I have it but I am a known to be over thinker so idk.

  • @antoniobradley962
    @antoniobradley962 5 лет назад +4

    #Papispitfire I am a schizophrenic and its tough not to have to live in mental ward. I love the part you said about prevention in meeting someone irrationally and having a child 👶.

    • @sarfrazakhtar4979
      @sarfrazakhtar4979 Год назад

      So are you on medicine ?

    • @antoniobradley962
      @antoniobradley962 Год назад

      @@sarfrazakhtar4979 yes invega trinza

    • @antoniobradley962
      @antoniobradley962 Год назад

      @@sarfrazakhtar4979 yes invega trinza

    • @sarfrazakhtar4979
      @sarfrazakhtar4979 Год назад

      @@antoniobradley962 what you'll have to take this whole the life ? Or just for years ?

    • @antoniobradley962
      @antoniobradley962 Год назад

      @@sarfrazakhtar4979 it’s an injection every 3 months. I’ve been here n it for 2 years I gained 30 lbs but other than that it’s been working

  • @channapragadasrib3631
    @channapragadasrib3631 3 года назад

    Hi good afternoon .do patients suffer from scz from long time?Do they will have normal life suffering from delusions hearing voices

  • @Ega4beer
    @Ega4beer 2 года назад

    Hope Morgan Geyser will get better! 🙏

  • @annafia
    @annafia 5 лет назад +41

    I suffered from a psychosis two years ago, and I still hear voices today, but most of the delusions are gone. I do wonder if the voices are real or not, they claim to be divine.
    The medications I take make me tired. I'm afraid they can't get rid of the voices.
    I don't plan to stop taking them though, even if it's just placebo and just keep the paranoia away.

    • @amyshoemaker5770
      @amyshoemaker5770 5 лет назад +3

      Good medication for paranoia is Abilify. I have been on the Abilify for 16 years and I am completely free of symptoms from schizoaffective disorder

    • @Channy22able
      @Channy22able 5 лет назад +8

      Sofia Thanks for sharing. As a medical student I just now realised how mental disorders are stigmatize and that is not ok. Good on you Sofia, for sticking to your meds even in doubt. Therapy adherence is very important.

    • @eyemallears2647
      @eyemallears2647 4 года назад +2

      Thanks for your courage Sofia. Stay positive :-)

    • @tauresattauresa7137
      @tauresattauresa7137 3 года назад

      See your doc again, they may be able to add other meds to stop the voices.

    • @tristanbulluss9386
      @tristanbulluss9386 3 года назад

      I've got a video of that stuff on my channel.

  • @hhssoo6579
    @hhssoo6579 4 года назад +4

    my schizophrenia started one year ago I Lived in united States for 15 years this fucking country made me schizophrenic so much stress and people's now I hear voices I see things differently it's really killing me

    • @Mahadevan-nu8re
      @Mahadevan-nu8re 3 года назад

      do u have family history

    • @danieltewelde6449
      @danieltewelde6449 2 года назад +1

      Try holly water from orthodox church priest and prayer the demons will going away from you.

  • @hema11901
    @hema11901 4 года назад +1

    Nice

  • @Xlicty
    @Xlicty 4 года назад +13

    I talk to myself in my head but myself talks back to me. So i have a conversation with my self is this a personality disorder i was born in june and is 14

    • @hanankhan779
      @hanankhan779 4 года назад +1

      yes it happens with me as well is there a treatment for it ?

    • @Xlicty
      @Xlicty 4 года назад +2

      @@hanankhan779 idk im not carzy just its hard to focus. I was just wondering if thats how all people think or is it just me

    • @19MadMatt72
      @19MadMatt72 4 года назад

      Thought I was the only one.

    • @LunarBootes
      @LunarBootes 4 года назад +3

      Silver Pop I know man so do I. I’m 14 years old too I have long conversations to myself stay up all night talking to myself been happening for months

    • @beckykohn5908
      @beckykohn5908 4 года назад +1

      Same i also been having breakdowns as screaming and shaking not in my control also things a lot worse

  • @kendrom
    @kendrom 3 года назад +9

    I have a question; Does prolonged sleep deprivation produce the same symptoms as schizophrenia? Are there any differences?

  • @sivaswaroop8437
    @sivaswaroop8437 4 года назад +1

    thank you so much

  • @jeneseJonEs
    @jeneseJonEs 3 года назад +2

    shouldnt it be blunted affect in people with schizophrenia? flat affect is seen in depression.

  • @jeanpaultongeren125
    @jeanpaultongeren125 3 месяца назад

    Most of the side effects is what makes life hard. I mean, not feeling really alive, no motivation. Its really hard to keep a 3 day volunatry work. blunting/sedating hard to wake up sometimes

  • @pennyoflaherty1345
    @pennyoflaherty1345 Год назад

    My husband was diagnosed at56 years old

  • @ajengekaariyanti9107
    @ajengekaariyanti9107 2 года назад

    I have question, What do people with schizophrenia need besides medication? then, what can make them relapse? And what kind of environment is needed to support the patient so that his condition is better?

    • @carriejacobs2757
      @carriejacobs2757 Год назад +1

      I have recently recovered from schizoaffective disorder. It seems to me to be a lack of knowledge in how to be healthy and take optimal care of oneself. I believe my illness to be caused by a number of factors, maybe the biggest being heavy metal toxicity from silver amalgam fillings. I went on GAPS diet, cut out sugar almost 100%, and ate mostly raw fruits and veggies. Also, I started exercising more, and meditation was also helpful. Try as much as you can to get off medication and learn self-control instead of letting meds do it for you. I believe all meds to be poisonous and they will likely shorten your lifespan.

    • @ajengekaariyanti9107
      @ajengekaariyanti9107 Год назад

      @@carriejacobs2757thanks for your Response. did you feel better now? what's different about you before and after?

    • @carriejacobs2757
      @carriejacobs2757 Год назад +1

      @@ajengekaariyanti9107 I hope I can help others going through a similar struggle. Night and day difference for me. I went from utterly exhausted and malaised all the time to newfound energy and peace. I have to say two other things helped a lot: herbal and superfood tinctures and brain training apps to exercise cognitive skills. And get out and participate in activities you enjoy or are interested in even if you struggle with shyness a bit like me. 👍😉

    • @carriejacobs2757
      @carriejacobs2757 Год назад

      @@ajengekaariyanti9107 also, when I got my silver amalgam fillings removed in 2015, my holistic dentist suggested I start taking chlorella and cilantro to detox. Be careful, take small amounts to begin with, and go slow, or you'll make yourself sick with detox symptoms, the Herxheimer efffect, which seems to be what happened to me. It's not a permanent illness you take meds for. Your body is saying take it easy and slow on your detox protocol because it's overwhelmed with trying to get poisons out of your body. Also, stay away from synthetic vitamins, they're poisonous also.

  • @meganbowen8268
    @meganbowen8268 6 лет назад +2

    I am writitng a paper on schizophrenia I would love to cite some info from tbis video. How do I cite this video in my references ? APA format

    • @xDomglmao
      @xDomglmao 3 года назад

      blog.apastyle.org/apastyle/2012/11/how-to-cite-a-class-in-apa-style.html maybe this helps!

  • @BeanDar
    @BeanDar 2 года назад +4

    I would argue that we just stop saying psychiatric disorders, and call it what it really is… a brain disorder.

  • @shawnli9284
    @shawnli9284 3 года назад

    great

  • @ahmedlafta9255
    @ahmedlafta9255 4 года назад

    I love your lecture my teacher

  • @Claudia-vf8vl
    @Claudia-vf8vl 3 года назад +1

    I used to bé dépressed but happy and living normal life...
    After my first psychosis my life becomes simply HELL 😫🤦 I hate this illness ... U Can t even correct a mistake or start a new page coz voices won t give u thé chance to ....

    • @two7celly406
      @two7celly406 2 года назад

      It gets better I promise

    • @Slidehhy
      @Slidehhy 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@two7celly406when

  • @SomethingWet
    @SomethingWet 2 года назад +1

    Wow, people born in winter are more prone to schizophrenia? I've never heard that before. That's very interesting

  • @kassemmagtary9299
    @kassemmagtary9299 Год назад

    Great

  • @SalmanJehanzeb
    @SalmanJehanzeb 3 года назад +1

    Just take an antiallergic cz people diagnosed such r sensitives n allergic to life which means allergic to 90% things so identify things which cause the symptoms..... Nd psychology is the thing to read for mental nourishment not psychiatry because they still unsure about what causes it.... U all r God gifted n every human is..

  • @jamesstarnes4591
    @jamesstarnes4591 3 года назад +2

    This is a true story there was a time were me and my mate Roy sitting in the front room when out of no where a voice said horror no one was with us it must be a demon we both Heard it dose that mean we both have schizophrenia can someone help

    • @hellnawh.5430
      @hellnawh.5430 2 года назад

      Nah bro demons can't talk

    • @hellnawh.5430
      @hellnawh.5430 2 года назад +1

      They attack from behind

    • @muhammadajmalsaif4727
      @muhammadajmalsaif4727 2 года назад

      no must be some other symtoms and timeline is very imp along with fuctioning in routine life.

  • @Alprtngakrc
    @Alprtngakrc 5 лет назад +16

    Well to sum it up: There are no objective criteria for schizophrenia. Its diagnosis and treatment are based on subjective evaluations and impressions of mortal beings who 're prone to make mistakes. This makes it open to all sorts of abuses.
    We can't know if the patient responds well to the treatment or not as the evaluation of the improvement or the retrogression of the patients too is again based on subjective impressions.
    Actually we can't distnguish a person who really suffers from schizophrenia from a person who pretends to be schizophrenic or vice versa. Thus we can't know if this condition is a temporary one which will disappear by itself in time just like flu or a permanent one like diabetes. According to World Health Organization data the ones who don't receive any treatment for schizophrenia in underdeveloped countries are doing much better than the ones recieving aggressive drug treatments in developed countries in the long run.
    Those symptoms mentioned here could well develop in prolonged stays in coercive environment of psychiatric hospitals and the ensuing uncertainity emerging in the minds of the patients, and actually mental health professionals could well be the main culprit of the aggravated symptoms of this condition which would otherwise disappear completely when they're treated in noncoercive and compassionate environments. We need transparency and accountability in mental health facilities

    • @pg8982
      @pg8982 4 года назад +6

      What are you talking about? The WHO states absolutely no such thing. Its webpage clearly states how disabling of a disease Schizophrenia is worldwide. People with Schizophrenia who do not receive pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy DO NOT do better than patients who receive no treatment. There is a clear pattern of "downward drift" of these individuals in every society, mostly due to their negative symptoms which often predominate in the chronic long-term trajectory of the disease (avolition, alogia, anhedonia), and the positive symptoms of disorganized thought and behavior. This makes it very difficult for these individuals to function in society (hold jobs, manage finances, manage relations, ect..). This is very well documented around the world. What the WHO states is that "old-style" mental institutions are not the best places for these patients to be treated. I don't even know what "old-style" means, but I assume it's One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest-style instiutions, which absolutely don't exist in first world nations anymore and haven't for some time. Secondly, it's widely accepted that psychiatric hospitals should not be long-term care centers, and in first world nations they're not. They're designed to diagnose and manage acute/severe mental illness, stabilize high acuity patients, and discharge them into IOP (intensive outpatient) therapy and general outpatient management. You've obviously never seen the patients in an inpatient psychiatric facility. They are the sickest of the sick and need psychiatric care and are in no way fit to be in general society as their behavior is a risk to their own well-being and to the well-being of others.
      www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/schizophrenia
      Key facts
      Schizophrenia is a chronic and severe mental disorder affecting 20 million people worldwide (1).
      Schizophrenia is characterized by distortions in thinking, perception, emotions, language, sense of self and behaviour. Common experiences include hallucinations (hearing voices or seeing things that are not there) and delusions (fixed, false beliefs).
      Worldwide, schizophrenia is associated with considerable disability and may affect educational and occupational performance.
      People with schizophrenia are 2-3 times more likely to die early than the general population (2). This is often due to preventable physical diseases, such as cardiovascular disease, metabolic disease and infections.
      Stigma, discrimination and violation of human rights of people with schizophrenia is common.
      Schizophrenia is treatable. Treatment with medicines and psychosocial support is effective.
      Facilitation of assisted living, supported housing and supported employment are effective management strategies for people with schizophrenia.
      Schizophrenia affects 20 million people worldwide but is not as common as many other mental disorders. Schizophrenia also commonly starts earlier among men.
      People with schizophrenia are 2 - 3 times more likely to die early than the general population (2). This is often due to physical illnesses, such as cardiovascular, metabolic and infectious diseases.
      Stigma, discrimination and violation of human rights of people with schizophrenia is common.
      People with schizophrenia are prone to human rights violations both inside mental health institutions and in communities. Stigma of the disorder is high. This contributes to discrimination, which can in turn limit access to general health care, education, housing and employment.

    • @Alprtngakrc
      @Alprtngakrc 4 года назад

      @@pg8982 One of the enduring mysteries in schizophrenia research circles has been the disparity in outcomes between schizophrenia patients in "developing countries" and those in "developed" countries. The mystery arose in 1979 when World Health Organization investigators announced that, in a five-year study, patients in developing countries had fared better than those in the United States and other "developed" countries. A second study then produced the same startling results. In developing countries, the WHO researchers concluded, schizophrenia patients enjoyed "an exceptionally good social outcome," whereas living in a developed country was a "strong predictor" that a person would never fully recover.
      www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/mad-in-america/201005/schizophrenia-mystery-solved
      In 2007, Martin Harrow reported on the 15-year outcomes of a group of 64 schizophrenia patients he had been following since the 1980s. Forty percent of those off meds were in recovery (and more than 60% were working), whereas only five percent of those taking antipsychotics were in recovery (and few were working.) Only 28% of those off meds still suffered psychotic symptoms at the end of 15 years, versus 64% of those still on meds. "I conclude that patients with schizophrenia not on antipsychotic medication for a long period of time have significantly better global functioning than those on antipsychotics," Harrow said at the 2008 annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

    • @pg8982
      @pg8982 4 года назад +1

      @@Alprtngakrc There are a myriad of factors for outcome discrepancies between developed and developing nations. The literature on international human rights abuses against the mentally ill is vast, and rights abuses against patients with psychotic illnesses like Schizophrenia are well documented in international literature. You cite a blog post from Psychology Today (hardly a source of merit for medical or sociological data) which provides findings from WHO studies whose findings have since been called into question by many researchers for their flawed and simplistic data retrieval methods. I simply do not have the time to get into a back-and-forth with you, nor do I have the time to cite the countless research papers that disagree with your points and the WHO studies. Here is a statement from the discussion section of a research paper; it clearly explains the major problem with the patient/subject-retrieval method used by the WHO studies.
      "...the sampling methods utilized in the WHO studies may have resulted in overly optimistic perceptions of course and outcome in low- and middle-income countries. Except for the China ISoS site, sampling in all the WHO studies relied on a variety of help-seeking agencies to identify potential subjects.10,11,15 However, community surveys in rural China,29 India,36,43,46 Indonesia,78 and Ethiopia have shown that large proportions of persons with schizophrenia (between about 25% and almost 90%) never receive biomedical treatments. Furthermore, outcomes in these samples, whether or not subjects received treatment following inclusion in the studies, tended to be poor. Therefore, there is the possibility that case-finding methods which focus exclusively on help-seeking agencies will miss large proportions of seriously ill, poor prognosis individuals."
      www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2632419/

    • @Alprtngakrc
      @Alprtngakrc 4 года назад

      @@pg8982 Do you remember your initilal reaction to my post. Let me remind you "What are you talking about ? The WHO states absolutely no such thing" There's a difference between to say that WHO states no such thing and to say that the others have different interpretations than the WHO researchers regarding the cross-country studies. The WHO studies weren't funded by any of the parties who have financial interests with the findings of the studies. The interpretation of the studies you cited on the other hand mentions nothing about whether or not there was conflict of interests. It never mentions which groups funded that research you cited.

    • @libernihilus
      @libernihilus 2 года назад +1

      subjective data is still data.
      Wholeheartedly agree with the culture-bound observation, however.
      Most psychiatric resources are heavily biased towards medical intervention; as there's a whole industry of profiteering gluttons to feed.

  • @dr.chiropractor6156
    @dr.chiropractor6156 6 лет назад +7

    Mr B has more negative symptoms than positive symptoms, his age is also a poor prognostic factor coupled with his gender, how is it possible that overall he has a good prognosis?
    His good prognostic factors are:
    Family support
    Positive symptoms
    Late onset

    • @forgetfulstranger
      @forgetfulstranger 3 года назад

      @@smokyprogg wow, a doctor trying to learn in the comments section of a medical teaching video, shocking!!!!

  • @luxjava
    @luxjava 3 года назад +1

    What happens if a schizophrenic no longer takes medicine? How many days does it take to have the first symptoms of schizophrenia?

    • @sarfrazakhtar4979
      @sarfrazakhtar4979 Год назад

      @@bryonthelyon hello please tell me you had mild symptoms 2 years ago ? I mentioned you in another comment please reply

    • @sarfrazakhtar4979
      @sarfrazakhtar4979 Год назад

      @@bryonthelyon and after leaving medication you don't feel any symptoms?

    • @sarfrazakhtar4979
      @sarfrazakhtar4979 Год назад

      @@bryonthelyon ah thanks 🙏 in my case I have this from my childhood and I'm taking medicines now symptoms are not too much alhamdulillah I took it one week I want to challenge myself it'll help me this like I challenge myself in sports ✌️✊

    • @sarfrazakhtar4979
      @sarfrazakhtar4979 Год назад

      @@bryonthelyon inshallah definitely brother because we have tolerated this so we can understand the pain 🤲✌️☝️

  • @crystalcollins3741
    @crystalcollins3741 2 года назад +1

    How do you get rid of schizophrenia

    • @Paul4Krista20
      @Paul4Krista20 Год назад +1

      I personally been thinking it’s healed with a self induced fatal head wound myself, but I am also not a trained psychologist and only a schizopatient.

  • @midgetmonster7897
    @midgetmonster7897 3 года назад

    What of overlapping disorders?

    • @Paul4Krista20
      @Paul4Krista20 Год назад

      The gift of more then one of these wonderful disorders

  • @M.C.H-MakeChangeHappen89
    @M.C.H-MakeChangeHappen89 2 года назад

    At the beginning

  • @ghirardellichocolate201
    @ghirardellichocolate201 2 года назад

    Glass nail filer shows whether the person has developed any anorexia-bulimia like symptoms.

  • @samaelfromstein1503
    @samaelfromstein1503 2 года назад

    I got it I Experienced becoming a pluralised I and then hijacking the body of kingu becoming the threshold guardian archetype where I hunted down ten demons in the black lodge using a new predatory hunger that awakened into a draconian vampire.i prefer we over in terms of speech

  • @katalinsztanko175
    @katalinsztanko175 2 года назад

    Wow.. my Mom presented only 1 of the mentioned 10 risk factors before her suicide attempt.. she is paranoid. but she is 69. She was diagnosed in 1982 (!) and no attempts since then until this year when she got the Covid vaccine. No, I am not antivax, I guess if she contracted covid, that would have been the same . Something to do with immunity.. immunoreactions trigger the symptoms.. Her hallucination symptoms got so bad in a few days that she simply could not bear them. Why don't immunologists and psychiatrist work together? This video is very nice, but not enough! Not enough!

    • @stevejelly3161
      @stevejelly3161 2 года назад

      Hi Katalin !!!
      ...
      Just a short note from here in the UK .... I hope your Mom is OK now ???
      ...
      We are going through very difficult times right now ... but i do hope everything starts to improve ???
      ...
      Take care and HAPPY NEW YEAR to you, your Mom and all !!!

    • @katalinsztanko175
      @katalinsztanko175 2 года назад +1

      @@stevejelly3161 thank you she is doing fine now, fingers crossed that it stays like this. Happy new year :)

    • @stevejelly3161
      @stevejelly3161 2 года назад

      @@katalinsztanko175 My pleasure !!!

  • @PabloMartinMed
    @PabloMartinMed 3 года назад +1

    9:00 alogia is poverty of thought, not of speech.

    • @xDomglmao
      @xDomglmao 3 года назад +1

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alogia

    • @forgetfulstranger
      @forgetfulstranger 3 года назад

      logia literally means speech though, it's poverty of speech

    • @luckeystrike3541
      @luckeystrike3541 3 года назад

      @@forgetfulstranger when you dont speak thats poverty of speach, any word you uter should be considerined as rich

  • @czlucar
    @czlucar Год назад +1

    The diagnosis is very controversial. Calling it an illness is a misnomer. Illnesses have biomarkers. That's why it's listed in the DSM as a disorder and NOT an illness. Sadly many patients get misdiagnosed with the disorder. People with neurological, hormonal, or even metabolic disorders who present with psychiatric symptoms like hallucinations could be misdiagnosed with schizophrenia.
    It's been reported that a 70-year-old woman with a diagnosed case of chronic schizophrenia recovered on a keto diet. Did she really have schizophrenia or was it a severe metabolic disorder? Here is an excerpt: "In 2009, a 70-year-old woman with chronic schizophrenia since her teens was reported to have improved significantly after starting a ketogenic diet for weight loss (Kraft and Westman, 2009). Within 8 days of starting the diet, she reported no hallucinations and improved energy. After 1 year, she lost 5 kg and remained free of hallucinations." - IJNP, Published online 2020 Jun 23 - Ketogenic Therapy in Serious Mental Illness: Emerging Evidence - Sarnyai and Palmer
    There's also the case of Susannah Cahalan whose encephalitis was misdiagnosed as a psychotic disorder, possibly schizophrenia. If it wasn't for the neurologist who intervened, she would have deteriorated in a psychiatric hospital. Any rigid postures, which can happen with encephalitis, would have been seen as catatonia.
    And what about the patients who have traumas that are unaddressed and told they're just sick in the head when they have psychiatric symptoms. I know someone who only heard a voice the day after she was raped by a serial rapist. Fortunately, when she resolved the trauma the voice went away.
    Please don't be misled into thinking it's a disease. People have recovered from a diagnosis of schizophrenia. Mainstream psychiatry is trauma uninformed and still somewhat primitive in its understanding of what they define as schizophrenia.

    • @babiesandbuddies
      @babiesandbuddies 11 месяцев назад

      I have a disabled son who developed schizophrenia when he hit puberty. I've wondered if he doesn't have something different. He's always been chronically underweight since infancy (below the 1-3rd percentile - even while on risperidone) and is an extremely underweight adult. His nail beds turned a deep bronze color and remained that way since he was 7. He's always had mild muscle weakness and coordination issues, but lost muscle coordination and balance with the onset of his psychotic symptoms- and his extremities are always bluish, even when he's warm - despite being eastern European. He doesn't respond well to the antipsychotics and he's a completely different person than he was before he developed psychosis. He has mild facial deformities (large prominent eyes that are close together, large eyebrows that meet in the middle, an elongated and deep philtrum, a narrow and crooked palate) elongated arms, mild microcephaly and is extremely hypermobile. Genetics haven't found any answers though other than ehlers-danlos and a benign microdeletion.

  • @crystalcollins3741
    @crystalcollins3741 3 года назад

    I fleeing I feel stupid being this way

  • @Yur41kkk
    @Yur41kkk 3 года назад +6

    Or some people simply perceive and understand things others don't. Some people can't recognize colours, but we don't treat colour perception in those who can. This "disorder" is a great misconception still to be fully understood.

    • @muhammadajmalsaif4727
      @muhammadajmalsaif4727 2 года назад +1

      it will make sense....if they are not struggling by themselves.....actually you cannot describe it truly unless you are experience it ......it not just the symptoms.......it also causes alot of pain.struggle and suffering every single day become so hard to pass

  • @andrewphillips-hird3761
    @andrewphillips-hird3761 Год назад

    Unfortunately there are some important points which are either incorrect or presented misleadingly. For example, it was not clearly stated that tardive dyskinesia and hyperprolactinemia are medication side effects rather than symptoms of schizophrenia. Also, I wouldn't be so hasty in considering high intelligence to be a good prognostic factor, as high intelligence is associated with increased risk of suicide in schizophrenia.

  • @nibussss
    @nibussss 2 года назад

    General brain processing issue fixed with weeks food in relatively high doasge.
    If food tasty he will eat more.
    Indian food...etc..is gastro stimulant (not over spicy though?).
    Mild spicy ..non spicy variants there. Punjabi food?

  • @tonyzapata1040
    @tonyzapata1040 2 года назад

    ALOT OF GOOD SPEECHES BUT WEARS THE HELP

  • @bryananderson1044
    @bryananderson1044 4 года назад +13

    I have a twitter page with bible verses specifically for the schizophrenic. It is called Awake, Afflicted Jerusalem. I hope this comforts you.

  • @The18081986
    @The18081986 2 года назад

    Do you HAVE to hear voices and see things to have schizophrenia?

    • @markae0
      @markae0 8 месяцев назад

      Everyone hears voices, it is all bull... They used to be know as sins (if bad choices). You get the idea to steal, to be angry, or the "good" to be generous and charitable , kind and forgiving. Vice vs virtue. Only as adults are we supposed to make the correct choice. "In physics, we use the same laws to explain why airplanes fly, and why they crash. In psychiatry, we use one set of laws to explain sane behaviour, which we attribute to reasons (choices), and another set of laws to explain insane behaviour, which we attribute to causes (diseases)" Szasz.

  • @0509brook
    @0509brook 2 года назад +2

    am I the only one who kept hearing Mr. Beast?

  • @krest2012
    @krest2012 2 года назад

    First
    Listen we are spiritual being having a human experience ok.
    Not human having spiritual experience
    You can’t heal spiritual malevolence with drugs
    It can only suppressed with drug temporarily but it needs to still need combat from the spiritual

  • @M.C.H-MakeChangeHappen89
    @M.C.H-MakeChangeHappen89 2 года назад

    I actually found this slightly misleading in context

  • @Theonegov
    @Theonegov Месяц назад

    Neurotransmitter : Synthetic Telepathy - NSA Signals Intelligence Remote Neural Monitoring

  • @Carlos-hl7lq
    @Carlos-hl7lq 5 лет назад +3

    LA TRADUCCION ES MUY MALA POR FAVOR AUDIO ESPAÑOL

  • @nibussss
    @nibussss 2 года назад

    Wud drs feel paranoid about patients and wud it be seen as paranoid ideation.
    Patient has microphone,
    What about wrong study area....anyone wud be depressed.

  • @christievibeshub
    @christievibeshub 2 года назад

    What's the theory behind men having schizophrenia disorder earlier than women

    • @JohnSmith-ys4nl
      @JohnSmith-ys4nl 2 года назад

      Its the same with bipolar as well. Studies show men get it most often by age 21. The average age for women is 25.

    • @celestialxdiva
      @celestialxdiva 2 года назад

      Males have the greatest hormonal shift in their late teens and females have the greatest hormonal shift normally while pregnant & giving birth.

  • @user-nv8pq7zr8q
    @user-nv8pq7zr8q Год назад

    Unfortunately, there are many inaccuracies in this presentation. Outcomes in schizophrenia are poor. Resistance to treatment is high, especially when delusions are present.

    • @markae0
      @markae0 8 месяцев назад

      Look up Robert Whitaker (writer) on his outcomes . He found those un-medicated have better long term outcomes. Delusion is relative, one persons junk is another persons treasure. Before modern medicine a large percentage of the mentally ill recovered from a one time/brief episode. "The authors present the findings from a long-term follow-up study of 118 patients from Vermont State Hospital who, when rediagnosed retrospectively, met DSM-III criteria for schizophrenia at their index hospitalization in the mid-1950s. The patients were studied with structured, reliable, multivariate instrument batteries by raters who were blind to information in their records. The rediagnostic process is described, and results of the follow-up are presented. Outcome varied widely, but one-half to two-thirds of the sample had achieved considerable improvement or recovered, in contrast to statements in DSM-III that predict a poor outcome for schizophrenic patients." Am J Psychiatry. 1987 Jun;144(6):727-35.doi: 10.1176/ajp.144.6.727.

  • @jeanthornton2441
    @jeanthornton2441 3 года назад +2

    Sounds good but ssri drugs cause every one of these symptoms. If you give ssri drugs to a normal person you have misdiagnosed you produce artificial schitzophrenia. Watching this i can diagnose two of my work mates as scitzophrenia disorder , the mood swings, personal hygiene. Also if a person is being abused it is not schitzophrenia. There are cases where abuse and those abusing is ignored and the victim is diagnosed with a disorder with the abusers applauded. I have had this done to me and those doing the abuse have loved the outcome as it is further abuse. I saw this in another young woman who ended up with tartive dyspepsia from the drugs and is now permanently brsin damaged while her abusers applaud the result.

    • @libernihilus
      @libernihilus 2 года назад +1

      i have reported abuse and intentional framing by false reports to police and was diagnosed with paranoid disorder as a result.
      Joke's on them, now. I won.

    • @wendyhamilton1318
      @wendyhamilton1318 2 года назад

      @@libernihilus it seems that that is what the collective department staff do. I believe that they diagnose themselves in the lives of others. When I finally got my notes and mind you they over drugged me doubled my heart medication refused medical assistance, I read that they stated I wa of low iq could not look after myself and could not make sound decisions. They violated my life covered their actions by stating I had a really bad illness which they could not find any symptoms of . Their parting words were I was lucky to leave there alive, this was not in their notes said by the head of department to my face but as I have no understanding or comprehension in their eyes I get discounted. They intended my death and no doubt seeing as I was told twice by them that they will never stop they will be going around spreading gossip, getting info anything they can to further harm my life and in their minds they are helping. They are clearly delusional and dangerous. I am only going on what was actually said and written.

  • @xDomglmao
    @xDomglmao 3 года назад +1

    Psych comment section in YT...I should be laughing but it makes me sad

  • @catswift1213
    @catswift1213 3 года назад

    i don't understand any. i have schizophrenia

  • @marcalcober3672
    @marcalcober3672 3 года назад

    I hope you checked how many died at boston general.

  • @troyhayder6986
    @troyhayder6986 2 года назад +1

    Liars... I'm not mad at all.. They know things I wouldn't know.. And when I Google those things it's obvious I'm not mad..

    • @two7celly406
      @two7celly406 2 года назад

      This shit is pretty awesome sometimes.

    • @troyhayder6986
      @troyhayder6986 2 года назад +1

      @@two7celly406 its kinda crappy most of the time tho...

    • @two7celly406
      @two7celly406 2 года назад

      Ik trust me 5 years in! I'm 23. Got diagnosed at 19. First 4 years I was literally in hell. Now I see the future ALL the time. Really be living in deja Vu. Stay strong bro

    • @troyhayder6986
      @troyhayder6986 2 года назад

      @@two7celly406 i got diagnosed at 19...38...now im the devil...

    • @two7celly406
      @two7celly406 2 года назад

      @@troyhayder6986 I feel u bro

  • @davidmandra2417
    @davidmandra2417 3 года назад

    star wars rise of skywalker

  • @ekbergiw
    @ekbergiw 5 лет назад

    9:57 doomer memes

  • @nibussss
    @nibussss 2 года назад

    If u guys r wrong , the cruelty wud make any person psychotic..lol

  • @CDhunt
    @CDhunt 4 года назад

    Your never going psychologically from the past we adapt as humans. Adapt

  • @marcalcober3672
    @marcalcober3672 3 года назад

    How many dead at general hospital alone?

  • @atvman1014
    @atvman1014 2 года назад

    Heavy marijuana use

  • @mackinleymenezes6764
    @mackinleymenezes6764 Год назад

    WINTER IS COMING, DECEMBER 28, WELCOME TO PARADISE ISLAND

  • @apollodiggyto5978
    @apollodiggyto5978 Год назад

    Are u n ai

  • @FreakG.M.O
    @FreakG.M.O 4 года назад +2

    “Treatment”

  • @marcalcober3672
    @marcalcober3672 3 года назад

    2 million dead for your gaslighting. 2 million.

  • @CDhunt
    @CDhunt 4 года назад

    Say it in a conformed way. If you haven’t been there, don’t just go off your studies because it’s simple and easy. Stop trying to understand things that you’ll never understand. Stop labeling and listen better. You make a living off this so why keep Compiling things on top of each other it’s really very apparent

  • @carolburmeister3044
    @carolburmeister3044 21 день назад

    This is the most stupid talk iv ever heard trying to make everyday emotional responses that everybody has in their lifetime seem like a medical or brain "illness". Psychiatry is a crime against humanity.

  • @CDhunt
    @CDhunt 4 года назад

    Get over the old.

  • @abrahamhempel9260
    @abrahamhempel9260 2 года назад +1

    Treatment is a fucking joke and they know it. Notice how they rarely talk about treatment?! Unless its medication management, they don't care. You are on your own. Also, what if you dont have money for "appropriate" treatment- its "cost effective" though, right. I never even had an interesting discussion with a psychiatrist. It's as if they dont care about details or substance. The latest fad is diagnosis doesn't matter! Just medication. Who would ever really want to understand there distress, anyhow? Prolly, you couldn't even understand the polysyllabically euphemisms your psychiatrist uses. Seriously, I have never met a less curious profession than psychiatry.