Schizophrenia is a severe chronic brain disorder that is still a mystery in the modern age. Even though the disorder cannot be completely cured, there are several treatments that are developed to help with the symptoms. Statistics show that a majority of the people diagnosed show improvement depending on how much the disorder has affected their wellbeing .However, there are a number of side effects that vary depending on the person with the disorder. Disorganized Schizophrenia is when the person’s behavior is bizarre and seemingly childish. The movements and actions of the person’s body is pulled or twisted out of shape. Thier way of speech would be strange and very hard to understand. The speech may vary from slurs to not making any sense …show more content…
The positive symptoms are distorted but still have an excess of normal functions such as hallucinations and or disorganized speech patterns. When listening to the patient speak, the doctor will have a difficult time trying to completely understand what the patient is meaning to say. Common words will be used in uncommon ways which makes the understanding on what the patient or person increasingly challenging. Another form of positive symptoms are delusions in which the patient has false beliefs in something that is not real,but despite the evidence his or her beliefs cannot be corrected ( Davis, Palladino, 1995, p. …show more content…
565). The DSM-IV is a diagnostic process that is based on a constellation system or a group of related with the impaired occupational or social. In the first parts of the process, the doctor will look through all of the patient's medical history in depth. The doctor will then ask for urine and blood samples to rule out any type of drug usage or abuse that might be the reason for the hallucinations and or any other type of symptoms associated with schizophrenia. If the tests come in negative of drug use, the patient will then be moved to the next stage of the process. In the next stage the patient will go through different types of scans throughout the brain to rule out any type of form of epilepsy and or mood disorders. ( Thomas Learning,