Positive symptoms in schizophrenia are behaviours and disturbances which schizophrenics have whilst non-schizophrenic do not, and often improve or disappear with medication.
Hallucinations in schizophrenia are perceiving stimuli which other people do not perceive, most commonly auditory hallucinations (hearing voices), and less often visual hallucinations.
Delusions in schizophrenia are having beliefs which other people do not share, these might be delusions of grandeur (‘I am Jesus’), or paranoid delusions (‘The CIA is out to get me’).
Onehundred Danish patients with a history of psychosis were assessed using operational criteria, finding a concordance rate of 98%, demonstrating the high reliability of clinical diagnosis of schizophrenia using up-to-date classifications.
Nilsson et al (2000) found only a 60% concordance rate between practitioners using the ICD classification system, implying the DSM system is more reliable.
ICD-10 includes diagnoses such as thought echo, thought insertion/withdrawal, passivity, delusional perception, and third person auditory hallucinations, running commentary.
Negative symptoms in schizophrenia are behaviours and disturbances resulting from something schizophrenics lack compared to non-schizophrenics, and do not respond well to medication.