Holistic Recovery from Schizophrenia

Reciting the Koran to heal schizophrenia

This past week-end, Ian and I took an EasyJet flight to Marrakech, Morocco, a city three hours away by air. I wish I were there in the swinging sixties – no, actually no need, as I’m sure the city, the old part, the Medina, hasn’t changed a bit. The hippies are mostly gone, of course, but occasionally  you spot young tourists in jeans and a certain knitted stripey head gear that was a cross between a cap and a voluminous beret to cover your dreads.

When I go on these trips, I’m always hoping to find material for my blog. I usually do, which is serendipity, or what Carl Jung calls synchronicity. But, what were my chances in Marrakech, a city where I don’t know the language (the Arabic one, at least) or the culture?  Amazing, as it happened.

The second day we were there, Ian and I hired a local guide through the hotel. Ali took us on a walking tour of the Medina, to places that we wouldn’t normally see as a tourist because the labrynthine streets make it notoriously difficult to find your way back to your hotel. We got deeper and deeper into the ancient heart of the town, stopping at one point to look at an old caravan hotel, where the owners slept upstairs and the animals stayed in the courtyard below. At one point, Ali pulled us aside to explain that we were passing a special hospital. He pointed to a low doorway framed by beautiful, but crumbling Moroccan tiles. The door was open and there was a sign posted in Arabic announcing the hours that the clinic was open.

“Here in Morocco,” Ali said, “we sometimes put our faith more in old practices than in modern medicine. This is a place where mentally disturbed people come and they are encouraged to recite the Qur’an. It’s all about belief, but people get cured.” He pointed to another doorway to the left of the clinic. And that’s where they do, how do you call it?” He pretended to have a wound and started to suck the blood out. “Blood letting,” I said.  I edged closer to the door of the clinic, and sure enough, a man was sitting on a bench in the tiny room, reciting the Qur’an.

When I got back to the hotel, I looked up the following Internet explanation. According to this writer, not surprisingly, it’s the special vibration of the words of the Qur’an, that intrinsically heal.

Lloyd Sederer, psychiatry and violent crime

I’m seriously considering how much time I’m going to spend in my life and on my blog focusing on depressing topics, something I seem to be doing more of lately. January is not a good month for being optimistic, it is true. I tend to get more and more depressed listening to the daily litany of woes called “the news.” Perhaps sensing that I was in need of a cathartic experience, my middle son sent me the video of the python clinging for dear life to the wing of a Quantas flight and that cheered me up considerably – until I realized that the poor python died of hypothermia by the time the plane landed. Let’s just say its death didn’t lift my mood.

But then, along comes RSK, the blogging lawyer behind Refusing Psychiatry (Without Pissing Off the Neighbors). He’s almost a breath of fresh air! I can’t resist this guy’s charm, meaning  his formidable writing and meticulous analytic skills. I’ve always admired “le mot juste” and this guy’s writing them in spades. I’ve blackened the particularly delicious bits, below.

Lloyd Sederer, psychiatry and violent crime

The forced-drugging crowd think they can make hay with the Sandy Hook shootings. New York’s director of Mental Health wrote in a recent Wall Street Journal op-ed about what he calls the tragedy of mental health law. . . . .

. . . One of the most frightening examples of Orwellian “newspeak” I’ve seen in a long time, is Lloyd Sederer’s call for “user-driven design” of mental health services. User-driven, in the context of the easier forced treatment regime which Sederer favors, must be when patients become pieces of burning fuel to drive roaring combustion in the engine of state psychiatry, producing nothing, taking society precisely nowhere, but deafening and blackening the soul.

Sederer cynically complains that law plays a more prominent role in psychiatry than in any other medical specialty. But psychiatry is more an arm of the law than it is a real medical specialty. Psychiatrists themselves wanted it that way and planned it, beginning at least as early as the 1940’s. And without such a prominent role of law – that would be without involuntary commitment or forced treatment, and without the insanity defense excuse for criminal acts – psychiatry would have a much-reduced presence in society or none at all. As Thomas Szasz often suggested, it might just wither away.

Read more here

Re-examining the Biochemical Model after Newtown: The Effects of Stigma and the Need for Better Family Coaching

Re-examining the Biochemical Model after Newtown: The Effects of Stigma and the Need for Better Family Coaching

by Rossa Forbes

January 7, 2013

The media discussions around the horrific event that unfolded in Newtown, Connecticut just before Christmas once again focus the world’s attention on the nation’s gun control laws. Let’s hope that this time, the right actions for the right reasons will be taken to prevent these kinds of atrocities from occurring. This latest gun tragedy is also a topic of much debate in the mental health communities.

Discussion of what particular DSM mental health label Adam Lanza had, as with previous mass murders, is a red herring. That being said, our culture, our school system, the way we treat our family members has more and more adapted itself to psychiatric classification and labeling. The drugs used to treat these labels are more or less the same, thereby undermining these distinctions. Those of us in the more militant wing of the recovery movement believe that people have emotional problems in adjusting to living no matter what category they are deemed to fall under in the DSM.
What I am about to say will not stop the kinds of tragedies we see in Newtown, but it may save some individuals like Adam Lanza from becoming mass murderers.   Read more here

My letter to New York Times re Paul Steinberg op-ed

I rather doubt my lengthy letter to the editor will appear in the New York Times on-line edition, so I decided to print it after the comments (see below) that did appear. I have since submitted to the NYT an abridged version of my original letter. The Steinberg op-ed appears here.

Letters

The Many Unknowns of Schizophrenia     Published: January 1, 2013

To the Editor:

As a clinical psychiatrist, I found Dr. Steinberg’s article troubling. It is a common problem in our field that psychiatrists speak of schizophrenia as if it were a well-understood condition, with a clear pathology and clear, effective treatment.

In fact, our understanding of this phenomenon is evolving and unsettled. What we call schizophrenia is probably a syndrome with many causes, and with a wide range of outcomes, with and without treatment. Many people do benefit from standard treatments, but many do not — and many find these treatments objectionable because of metabolic and other toxicities.

Moreover, many people find the current system of mental health delivery to be disrespectful, coercive and violent. It would be hard to imagine forced treatment for other medical conditions, like cancer or cardiovascular disease.

It has been my experience that when people are treated in a respectful way, offering options and choices rather than dictating treatment, better outcomes occur. Similarly, when we doctors are honest about the limitations of our knowledge, and humble about the power of our proffered treatments, there is more room for the person at the center of concern to find a path of care that can be helpful and effective.

For a tiny minority of patients, with substantial histories of violence, it is appropriate that the legal system, after an adversarial process, compel patients to accept treatment against their will.

I am worried that Dr. Steinberg’s article communicates more certainty about the nature and treatment of schizophrenia than is warranted, and makes too little room for patients and their families to make informed choices about care.

CHRISTOPHER GORDON

Framingham, Mass., Dec. 26, 2012

The writer is a psychiatrist and an associate clinical professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.

To the Editor:

Paul Steinberg makes valuable points about the dismantling of sound psychiatric care for psychotic illness. He notes that in the name of civil liberty, severely disturbed people end up undertreated, at the expense of the “rights” of the community to be safe.

People suffering the harangues of command hallucinations and terrorizing paranoid delusions cannot demand civil liberty, failing any test of the capacity for informed consent (which requires an understanding of what refusing treatment means).
More important, it is in the interest of people with acute psychotic torments to get care, to protect them from doing horrific acts and, often, committing suicide. The right to treatment has been muddled by the misguided legal impositions.

In the past, egregious overuse of electroconvulsive therapy, toxic medication and long involuntary hospitalization motivated a reasonable patient rights movement. Times have changed. Treatment is more often withheld as insurers and risk managers shrink the obligations of decent care.
SARA HARTLEY

Oakland, Calif., Dec. 26, 2012
The writer is a psychiatrist.

To the Editor:
Paul Steinberg says, “It takes a village to stop a rampage.” Most of the millions of Americans with schizophrenia commit no violent or nonviolent crimes. As a nation, we have no monopoly on mental illness, nor do we have the worst mental health system in the world, or the most liberal protection of civil liberties. These are not the causes of our extreme firearms violence.

Dr. Steinberg is right that some practitioners are insufficiently interested in treating serious disorders. We do need mobile early intervention teams, collaboration among community mental health professionals and police, and less reliance on medications. Our people deserve better access to known best practices, true insurance parity and affordable, accessible services.
A nation can stop rampages, but it is doubtful that a more restrictive, coercive mental health system will help achieve that goal.

KENNETH J. GILL

Scotch Plains, N.J., Dec. 28, 2012

The writer is chairman of the department of psychiatric rehabilitation and counseling professions, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey.

To the Editor:

I am deeply offended on several levels by Paul Steinberg’s op-ed opinion, which he presents as facts. Dr. Steinberg has taken it upon himself to link schizophrenia to Adam Lanza. He seems to be the only person saying so from what I have read so far on both sides of the pond (I live in Europe). The media has variously reported autism spectrum, Aspergers, OCD, anxiety issues, but not once have I seen the word “schizophrenia.” There is nothing from what we know about Adam Lanza to date, that suggests schizophrenia to me.

But, Dr. Steinberg’s piece suggests something more troubling beyond the willingness of a psychiatrist to publically diagnose someone he has never met (which is highly unethical). He invokes his credentials as a psychiatrist to scapegoat psychiatry’s perennial bogey-man, schizophrenia. Remember, the media has not speculated on schizophrenia, and it is interesting that autism bloggers and activists seem to accept that Adam Lanza had something recognizable as a form of autism, but in unanimous agreement that autism did not pull the trigger.

Propagandists know that the “big lie” has a certain emotional credibility with the public that is missing from the small lie, and that the public will more readily fall under its spell.

What does substituting schizophrenia for autism accomplish, one may ask? Well, for a start, it immediately crystallizes in the mind of the public the recent mass murders when the word “schizophrenia” actually was reported as possible diagnosis. By going for the “big lie” in a period when the public is desperate to DO SOMETHING, Dr. Steinberg skillfully shifts the debate to forced treatment, something which is not on the agenda of the autism community. The autism lobby is big, relatively strong, and child-focused. The schizophrenia community is small, diverse, and not well organized or funded. Why take on autism (and children) when you can conveniently use schizophrenia to accomplish your policy goals?

There are countless people, well-informed bloggers, and even the letters writer here, who appear to have accepted Steinberg’s propaganda at face value. Perhaps this is because The New York Times gives Dr. Steinberg an authoritative platform by not allowing readers to comment directly on the piece? Why is that?

Yours sincerely,

Rossa Forbes

http://holisticschizophrenia.blogspot.com

I Was Adam Lanza – from The Daily Beast

I Was Adam Lanza 

from part I of III

Recently, the Huffington Post published an article titled “I am Adam Lanza’s mother” by a woman named Liza Long. The article presents a picture of a 13-year-old boy who threatened his mother, sometimes going so far as to pull a knife on her, scream obscenities at her, and leap out of cars as they’re driving down the highway.
The rest of the world has reacted to the idea of such a child with horror and incomprehension. I sympathize with the horror. I can only wish that I shared the incomprehension. I understand, intimately, how Liza Long’s son feels. I was like him.

Like the author of that piece, Liza Long, my mother had no idea what to do about my sudden transformation (in my case, around 16) into a borderline homicidal maniac. Like her son, I used knives to try and make my threats of violence seem more real. Like her son, I would leap out of our car in the middle of the road just to get away from my mother, over the most trivial of offenses. Like her son, I screamed obscenities at my mother shortly after moments of relative peace. And worse than this poor woman’s son, whose mindset toward his peers we can only guess, I will admit that I fantasized multiple times about taking ordnance to my classmates.

By the logic which leads Liza Long to say, “I am Adam Lanza’s mother,” I have to say: “I was Adam Lanza.”
………….

from part II of III

When your brain works more efficiently than everyone else’s, that means it performs most mental tasks more efficiently than other people, including go crazy. Worse, because a smart person’s brain is so good at running through hypotheses and rejecting them, it tends to come up with insanity that’s more resistant to basic therapy, because the rationalizations are built to withstand the assault of a genius level intellect. When people say genius and insanity are close cousins, this is what they’re talking about.

And when you’re isolated from other people, your own mind – and its crazy ideas – becomes the only company you have.

………..
Moreover, this kind of solitary confinement inside your won head breeds paranoia and lack of empathy, even where none existed before, because when you only live inside your own head, after a while, you fail to notice that anyone else is really human. They become means to an end, an end like getting media attention for your suffering by shooting them.
Can the tendency by society to isolate and shun people like me until they go mad be countered? I don’t know, but I hope that by putting its existence to print, someone might take a step to mitigate it. Sappy as it sounds, the day I stopped being dangerous was the day I learned what it was to really have friends, and by extension, to care about others, even if only (so far) a limited number of others. Society doesn’t create these disorders, but it can amplify them, and by extension, it can diminish them.
I don’t think you can avoid this copy cat effect entirely, but someone needs to call out the hypocrisy of a media that performs public autopsies on shooters’ psyches for the sake of hand wringing, and yet still covers these kinds of people like they’re dangerous animals instead of deeply damaged human beings. Everyone always wonders what the shooters were thinking before they pulled the trigger. I humbly submit that if those kids sent an essay on their feelings to any media outlet before they pulled the trigger, that outlet would refuse to print them for fear of accidentally frightening their readers.
If this series has conveyed anything, I hope it’s that there is an Option C, for troubled young people, for the parents who love them, and for the society that otherwise thinks about the odd and the unlikeable only when it gathers to grieve for the damage they have done. I did my first part by fighting the devils in my own head. I would think that fight was even more worthwhile if I could now find a way to communicate to others how to win victories of their own.

Tomorrow shall be my dancing day

The year is fast drawing to a close, and before I leave for the holidays I want to express how grateful I am for how well my oldest son is doing. For how well each of us in our household is doing. We are still on the journey, but Chris is now spending more time steering the boat and Ian and I are quite content after all these years to be merely the passengers.

What’s different about this year than last? One big observation that I have  is that Chris is losing the “flat affect.” When he began singing in public in earnest a couple of years ago, he had a beautiful voice, but his facial expressions and physical mannerisms were stiff. Not so much now. A friend from church who observed Chris while he underwent the Tomatis Therapy, told me she noticed when he sings in the church choir that he is developing the body/mind connection. This was borne out when I saw Chris perform in the Christmas pantomime. He was much more expressive on stage than he was in last year’s pantomime.

Chris has a girlfriend! She shares his love of musical theater. Hurrah! She also has a car to take him to rehearsals and back. Hurrah! Chris does not yet have a driver’s license. Perhaps a goal for the New Year?

He has friends! They are all around my age or older (horrors), but they share his passion for music and throw some great parties. Chris has spent many lonely evenings after he was first hospitalized almost nine years ago.

While Chris still has further capacity to grow and learn, recovery is to be expected for each of us if we have the patience, wisdom and fortitude to stay the course.

I wish you all the best of the holiday season.

Tomorrow shall be my dancing day   An old English carol     Turn up the volume

Who is on the child’s side?

A Reflection on Mothers, Children, and Mental Illness

By Faith Rhyn

Excerpt:

Parents will do anything to try to help. They will miss work, they will fill out forms. They will take out loans and they will even, if asked to, hold their own child down, believing that it is what must be done to help.

I don’t think parents realize the exchange they are making when they buy into ideas and treatment that, over time, have the potential to erode some very basic relational/trust bonds between child and caregiver. When I was in the midst of recognizing what had gone wrong in my story, I angrily told my mother, “You believed the professionals over me! You even trusted the professionals over yourself…and they didn’t even know what they were talking about!”

When the professionals teach mothers to see their children as ill, both mother and child are harmed in that they lose something essential to the parent-child relationship, which is the ability to see their children clearly, with compassion, love and a commitment to their brightest possible futures.

Read more of Faith Rhyn’s post here

The downside of the family-organized mental illness advocacy movement

The following article is from Pat Risser’s archived website  www.patrisser.com  June, 1998 also printed in Psychiatric Services. (Thanks to Maxine for sharing it at the ISEPP discussion group)

THE DOWNSIDE OF THE FAMILY-ORGANIZED MENTAL ILLNESS ADVOCACY MOVEMENT

by Sylvia Caras

Ms Caras, a disability rights advocate, is coordinator of electronic mailing lists for The Madness Group, an Internet service for users or former users of mental health services. This article was from a column printed in “Psychiatric Services”, June, 1998

Groomed, mature, confident, the family advocate articulated from the podium — carefully, with strength: “The horror of mental illness …”

“horror”

I felt as if a laser were searing me, shattering my sense of myself as a member of a caring family.

“horror”

I heard “the horror of your illness,” “horror … you,”

“horror,” “horror,” “horror”

The speaker was telling me what parents felt,

“horror,” “horror,”

what my children wouldn’t tell me,

“horror,” “horror,”

what my sister feared.

I felt an intruder. Afraid to speak, I tried to make myself outside as small as I felt inside — shamed, vulnerable, unwanted.

I imagined shaking hands with her, that family advocate. I imagined her wanting to wipe off the touch of my horror on her skirt.

We were at the plenary assembly of a federally sponsored annual meeting reporting the results of innovative community mental health programs.

I sat with 250 invited guests at the Holiday Inn and listened as, again from the podium, another mother brandished the “tragedy of mental illness.” At the word “tragedy,” many in the audience sighed together in shared grief. Even though my own family was not like this, I conjectured visiting my parents, reaching out for an embrace, and watching their hopelessness as they greeted their tragedy. I felt so dishonored.

That was in the fall of 1993. Until that time, I had been facilitating a local mood and melancholy support group. I had attended local mental health system improvement meetings and even a few national conferences. I had met friends and families who were caring and supportive. But I was new to national advocacy and that was my introduction to the powerful, well-funded mental illness lobby of families whose mission is to make the family issues central, to reveal the family pain, to spare the family image. Later I learned how in 1979 families had organized to protect themselves from blame, how they had put forward a biological model of disease, and how they were now lobbying, with the pharmaceutical and medical industries, for research dollars to support the biohealth approach to managing behavior.

Now, in 1997, I’ve served on boards and led groups and gone to conferences. Now, I have seen the families’ relief at finding exoneration become an ambition to medicate social disarray. I’ve felt their shunning since I started publicly to reformulate what I thought about my own 1987 experiences with the mental health system.

The family advocacy I watch seems to focus on the family’s misery, the family’s despair, the family’s efforts and frustrations, the family’s engrossment with itself. Despite a convincing collection of serious diagnoses, hospitalizations, and treatments, we who get on with our lives and offer ourselves as examples of recovery are dismissed as not really ill, exceptions, misdiagnosed. Our experience is not valued.

Instead, the idea of the loved one that is held on to is of one terribly, terribly sick — without hope. To me, this is an example of self-absorbed collateral family members intent on stilling the patient’s voice: the primary voice. By suppressing this voice with, if needed, handcuffs, restraints, sedation, seclusion, family advocacy has a chilling effect on the civil rights of individual loved ones. These violent interventions make me wonder what this loved voice might reveal if it were allowed to speak?

But the voice is co-opted by family advocates who don’t consider the impact of their patronage on the loved ones, discounting the loved ones as unaware of what they, these loved ones, themselves need. Who is well served by this reproduction of stigmatizing, patronizing sympathy, these repeated images of disturbance? I know I am wounded by the advocates’ language.

What I want from those who love me is not sympathy. I want my family members to welcome me, as me, just for being me. And I want to hear the language of respect.

Words express and interpret; words include and exclude; words matter. Verbal categories mold thinking; verbal categories can contribute to integration or to discrimination. Family advocates shape and use words and ideas in ways that seem to me to change the meanings so much that for the sake of clarity, different words should be used.

Family advocates regularly breach privacy by telling their children’s stories. These stories are not family property. They belong to the primary patient, not to the family. But family advocates tell of their loved one’s labels and behaviors.

So urgent are the wishes of active family advocates for personal relief that they use their children’s voices, disallow independence, and sensationalize their children’s anti-social activities. I have never heard family advocates assert that they have informed consent to tell these stories. I have rarely seen parents beside their own child, testifying together in advocacy for the same goals.

Not all families are so authoritarian. But authoritarian families curtail growth with coercive interventions and a flourishing fundamentalism, using fear and polarities, displaying no tolerance for ambiguity, no flexibility, accentuating the unnegotiable authority of the medical and psychiatric professions. In any social setting, rules must be learned; then rules must be tested and questioned and retested to be sure they are still applicable; that is the way of maturing. Some families understand the many parts and obligations of parenting. Some family members seem to be grieving for who they remember their loved ones were at some earlier time, while objecting to who those loved ones actually are now. Perhaps the hardest, arguably the most important part of parenting, is to trust the child enough to let go. Even children with disabilities deserve the chance to be let go.

Moving counter to social trends of diversity, globalization and openness, the family advocacy movement fragments, segregates, isolates, imposes secrecy, shames. I believe today’s mental health approaches will be remembered along with the Salem witchcraft trials as a dishonorable scapegoating of transformative experiences.

As a person with a disability, what I want is acceptance. When you speak of my life as a tragedy, you are robbing me of my dignity. I want you to see my potential, and to stop sensationalizing the family despair. I don’t want to uplift you with my pain. If you can’t love me as me, or accept me, or respect me, at least create a life for yourself separate from me. Today’s family organized advocacy stigmatizes your loved one, me, you, all of us.

Instead of seeing disease, listen.

Instead of discussing medication and non-compliance as an inability to understand one’s condition, listen to your loved one’s objections.

Instead of thinking how you gain, think of what, with medication, your loved one loses.

Instead of forcing your loved one into unwanted treatment, attend to what is wrong with services, attend to why services are refused; listen to the experiences.

Put the well-being of your loved ones above your wish to fence them off.

Truly listen, for just a moment.

Find the worth — the flair, the ingenuity, the ability.

See that worth, not disease.

Hear hope, not horror.

Listen.

Reprinted by permission of the author.

__._,_.___

Around the blogs

I’ve hand-picked some of the more interesting blog posts from the past few days that focus on the Newtown tragedy. With one notable exception.: Thoughts about David Oaks

When forced drugging was still debatable: David Oaks speaks after Virginia Tech 

Guns R Us…Why should Sandy Hook Surprise Us?

A Challenge to “I Am Adam Lanza’s Mother”

I am Adam Lanza’s Mother

Can antistigma campaigns be improved?

Can Antistigma Campaigns Be Improved? A Test of the Impact of Biogenetic Vs Psychosocial Causal Explanations on Implicit and Explicit Attitudes to Schizophrenia

Tania M. Lincoln1,2, Elisabeth Arens2, Cornelia Berger2 and Winfried Rief2

from The Schizophrenia Bulletin

In the hope to reduce stigma, campaigns have been emphasizing biogenetic (BG) explanations of schizophrenia and have been promoting the concept of “schizophrenia is an illness like others.”1517 For example, the “changing minds” program by the Royal College of Psychiatrists18 lists “changes in the structure of their brains,” “infections before they were born,” “disorder appears to run in families,” and “chemical messengers in the brain … are not working correctly” before mentioning any psychosocial (PS) cause. The National Alliance on Mental Illness19 lists no explicit PS causes of schizophrenia but states that “the brains of people with schizophrenia are different from the brains of people without the illness,” “schizophrenia seems to be caused by a combination of problems including genetic vulnerability and environmental factors that occur during a person’s development,” and recent research has “identified certain genes that appear to increase risk for schizophrenia.” Similarly, the World Psychiatric Association antistigma initiative “Open the Doors”20 states that “a predisposition is inherited” but that an “environmental trigger,” such as “complications during the mother’s pregnancy or labor,” “prenatal exposure to virus,” or “complications during pregnancy and delivery,” must also be present to bring on the “disease.”

There is reason to assume that antistigma programs might be improved by promoting a diathesis-stress model of schizophrenia.21,22 The diathesis-stress model, which is widely accepted in the scientific field, acknowledges genetic and early biologic developmental risks along with environmental stressors, such as life events, daily stressors, family communication, and trauma as relevant risk factors.2329 Its potential usefulness as a means of reducing stigma seems to be supported not only by the theoretical reflections about the possible effects that varying information is going to have on illness attributions and stigma but also by an array of empirical findings. On the one hand, it seems reasonable to assume that if the causes of mental health problems are attributed to factors outside the control of individuals (eg, biological factors), people’s reactions will be less negative and patients and families will experience less blame.3032 So far, however, this assumption has only been supported in one experimental study carried out with male students by Mehta and Farina,33 who found a disease view to be associated with less blame. On the other hand, it has been argued that BG explanations might cause the disorder to be viewed as more fundamental and immutable,33,34 exacerbate the “stickiness” of the mental illness label, and strengthen links to other undesirable characteristics.31 In support of this, a large number of studies have found biological explanations to be associated with higher levels of stigma and social distance, while this has not been shown for PS explanations.7,15,35,36 For example, in representative population surveys carried out in Germany, Russia, and Mongolia, it was found that the more respondents endorsed a brain disease as a cause, the more dangerous they believed a person with schizophrenia to be and the more desire they showed for social distance.7,37 The analysis of data from 601 adult respondents to a US telephone survey revealed genetic attributions to be associated with decreased optimism that a mental health professional could help with the problem.38,39 In their experiment, Mehta and Farina33 found that students who were provided with a disease view were prepared to apply more electric shocks toward fellow students whom they believed to have a history of mental disorder than students provided with a PS view.33 Finally, in a trend analysis of data from 2498 participants in Germany, Angermeyer and Matschinger40 found that as biological causes are being more widely acknowledged by the public, the desire for social distance toward people with schizophrenia has increased.

Read more of this study here.