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Recent Questions
- Why did everyone start to hate the Russians if the U.S. did the same thing in Afghanistan, Iraq?
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- Why did Blaise Pascal become a religious man at the end of his life?
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Let's first agree that “schizophrenia” is a dump of psychiatry, where many very diverse cases often fall, united only by the will of doctors who display these letters in the patient's chart.
Then your question can be answered like this. A huge part of these cases are “curable” – if we take again a certain spherical concept of “mental health”, and do not go into the fact that this concept in each specific psychiatric clinic depends on the specific head of this clinic – and this is even if we do not delve into the very essence of the issue and do not read Foucault about the history of psychiatry.�
If your question has something to do with personal experience, then I sincerely recommend Gregory Bateson's research – in the field of schismogenesis, doublebind, and communication in general. They are unfortunately not very well known and even less understood, but they are there and can be very useful to anyone who wants to understand more about schizophrenia and its cure.�
This is to put it very briefly 🙂
Scientific studies show that schizophrenia is curable, for example, one of the scientific studies that proved recovery in 19% of patients, complete remission in 44% and functional remission in 26%: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23810077/
Other sources indicate a higher percentage of those who fully recover.
Psychiatrists have formed a prejudice about the incurable nature of such patients due to constant contact with seriously ill patients, and they are usually avoided by convalescents. Source: THE MYTH OF SCHIZOPHRENIA AS A PROGRESSIVE BRAIN DISEASE https://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/mif-o-shizofrenii-kak-o-progressiruyuschey-bolezni-golovnogo-mozga
Be that as it may, recovery largely depends on your faith, if you believe that this disease is incurable, then you will not do anything to fight this disease.
If you believe in a possible cure, then you will make an effort to do so, and your chances of recovery will increase.
So, there are factors that contribute to recovery, a healthy lifestyle, the speed of contacting a psychiatrist after the first psychosis, and so on..