Schizophrenia Symptoms And Analysis

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Schizophrenia is a complex, psychological, lifelong mental illness. Schizophrenia affects the mind, life, and the people around those with schizophrenia. This disease has multiple symptoms, episodes, and conditions that can be treated with treatment, drugs, and several different types of support groups and care.

Keywords: Schizophrenia, symptoms, treatments, aetiology
Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia is a psychological, complex, mental illness. This is a devastating lifetime disease that affects a person’s mind, daily activities, and causes a decline in a person’s ability to function in reality with regular behavior. The most common symptoms schizophrenia people experience are either short or long term symptoms. Symptoms can be delusions, abnormal …show more content…

Positive symptoms are disorganized thoughts, delusions, and hallucinations. The main positive symptom is called delusion. Delusions are disorganized problems and thoughts that deal with feelings, motivation, and behavior. They are often false, unexplained, and people with delusions tend to believe that most people are out to get them. The second most common positive symptom is hallucinations which is defined as seeing, hearing, smelling, and feeling things that are not actually real (Kenny & Knott, 2013). Many people with Schizophrenia talk or scream out loud about the things they hear in their minds. Most of the voices that occur in their minds can affect the person’s actions, relationships, and thoughts. Negative Symptoms can be known as self-blame or neglect, social and emotional issues, as well as a lack of motivation (Roll & Knott, 2013). Negative symptoms, such as neglect or social and emotional issues can hinder a person’s job, relationships, education, and their physical or mental …show more content…

There is no actual evidence that can be determined, but researchers have found multiple possibilities that could affect a person’s chance of developing this disease and what causes the brain to react the way it does. Symptoms often start occurring in a person’s teenage years or later in life. In the journal “Schizophrenia,” Kenny and Knott write (2013) “Schizophrenia develops in about 1 in 100 people and the most common ages for it first to develop are 15-25 in men and 25-35 in women.” Researchers have developed a few theories that could explain why someone develops schizophrenia. Unbalanced neurotransmitters that are altered, genetics, social and environmental issues, viral infections passed through birth, stress from daily difficulties, and the intake of street drugs can trigger a person’s chance of developing this illness (Kenny & Knott, 2013).
Schizophrenia has many relapses and downsides that can affect a person but with help from treatment or recoveries can decrease many symptoms, but some people are not as lucky and will have a higher chance of catching another illness or disease. Positive recoveries can include stable relationships, personality, symptoms, continuous treatments, and lastly a better recovery process (Roll & Knott, 2013). Some poor prognosis in patients can be classified as a decreased life span due to neglect to personal care, cancer, suicide, cardiovascular disease, depression, drug or alcohol