1% of the population have schizophrenia. Onset of first symptoms is typically around 15 to 45 years of age. Men are morelikely to get schizophrenia, typically having an earlier onset.
what is used to diagnoseschizophrenia?
The Diagnostic and StatisticalManual (DSM) is mostoften used to diagnoseschizophrenia. However the ICD (InternationalClassification of Disease) can also be used. DSM-5 and ICD-10 are twoseparate systems/criteria for diagnosis.
o DSM-5 requires onepositivesymptom.
o ICD-10 requires twonegativesymptoms.
positivesymptoms of schizophrenia
additionalexperiences that are beyond those of normalexperiences
hallucinations: additionalsensoryexperiences such as seeingdistortions in objects that look like faces, or hearingvoices
delusions: irrationalbeliefs about themselves or the world, such as feelings of persecution or grandeur
negativesymptoms of schizophrenia
losses of normalexperiences and abilities
Avolition (a lack of purposefulbehaviour. No energy to socialise or look after hygiene. Generally apathetic)
SpeechPoverty (Briefverbalcommunication style. Loss of quality and quantity of verbalresponses. Can be classified as a positive symptom if speech is excessivelydisorganised with sufferers wandering off the point)
catatonia (lack of movement)
Reliability
the extent to which a finding is consistent. It is the extent to which psychiatrists can agree on the samediagnosis when independentlyassessingpatients (inter-raterreliability)
for a classification system to be reliable, the samediagnosis should be made eachtime - differentpsychiatrists should reach the same decision when assessing a patient
test-retestreliability
if the same thing measured under the sameconditionsyields the sameresults every time, i.e: the samedoctor giving the samediagnosisovertime for the samesymptoms.
Inter-raterreliability of schizophrenia diagnosis is often low
Beck (1962): found only a 54% concordance rate between doctors’assessments of 153patients. Inter-rater reliability of schizophrenia diagnosis is often low
However Jakobsen et al. (2005) tested the reliability of the ICD-10classificationsystem in diagnosingschizophrenia. A hundred patients were assessed , and a concordance rate of 98% was obtained. This demonstrates the highreliability of the clinicaldiagnosis of schizophrenia using up-to-dateclassification.
Validity
the extent to which we are measuring what we are intending to measure. In the case of an illness like schizophrenia we have to consider the validity of the diagnostictools
comorbidity
Comorbidity is when a person has morethanonementalcondition
Buckley (2009) found that 50% of schizophrenics are also diagnosed with depression, 47% with drugabuse, and 29% with PTSD, and 23% with OCD. So conditions like severedepression could be being misdiagnosed as schizophrenia. Or, as these diagnosesoftenhappentogether, perhaps they are not even separatedisorders
symptomoverlap
Other disorders like bipolardisorder have hallucinations and delusions as positivesymptoms as well. If twodisorders are verysimilar then it may be questions if they actually are distinctdisorders
Ellasonand Ross (1995): a total 108 patients with a clinicaldiagnosis of DID were assessed from sz symptoms. Findings: patients with this disorder reported morepositivesymptoms of sz than diagnosedschizophrenics - reducesvalidity
gender bias
Another issue with schizophrenia is genderbias. It may be that men are morelikely to be diagnosed due to genderbias as women’sissues aren’t taken as seriously
Fischer and Buchanan (2017): ratio of 1.4:1 for men to women.suggesting gender bias
Cotton et al (2009) suggests that women could just have bettercopingstrategies and so don’taccesstreatment as often as men.
Lewin (1984) found that the number of femalesufferersreduced when clearerdiagnosticcriteria were used, meaning that clinicians were overdiagnosingwomen.
cultural bias
Cochrane (1977) found that the rate of diagnosis of schizophrenia in the UK for afro-caribbean people was 7%, compared to 1% for the generalUkpopulation and 1% for afro-caribbeans in the caribbean.
Harrison et al (1997) found that diagnosis of sz amongst African Americanpopulations were 8xmorecommon
Rosenhan's experiment on Schizophreniadiagnosis
8pseudopatients (confederates) visited hospitalsposingsymptoms of hallucinations - gave reallifehistories. they actednormally - staffobserved
11diagnosed with SZ, 1 with manic-depression
staff failed to distinguishsane from insane, questioningreliability and validity of diagnoses of schizophrenia