watch the TED Talks below and share your reflection to the videos by answering the questions provided. Comment on ONE of your classmate’s posts.
What was your emotional reaction to the women in the TED Talks?
Consider the reading assignment and also the PowerPoint that you reviewed related to this category of diagnosis. Now compare the TED Talks where you watched and heard about the lived experience of having schizophrenia. Were the women in the TED Talks what you expected a client might act or speak like with this diagnosis? Please provide your rationale for your answer and be specific.
Reflect on the stigma shared by the women in the video and how this can contribute to your professional development and future practice as a social worker.
Guidelines:
Responses should be 200-250 words (for individual responses; not for commenting on a peers’ post), which you can provide one paragraph for each question.
APA is not required but if you should choose to include citations in your response, please cite accurately.
Edit for grammatical correctness.
Kilgus, M. D., Maxmen, J. S., & Ward, N. G. (2016). Essential psychopathology & its treatment (4th ed). New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company.
Chapter 12: Schizophrenia and Other Thought Disorders
Buizza, C., Schulze, B., Bertocchi, E., Rossi, G., Ghilardi, A., & Pioli, R. (2007). The stigma of schizophrenia from patients’ and relatives’ view: A pilot study in an Italian rehabilitation residential care unit Download The stigma of schizophrenia from patients’ and relatives’ view: A pilot study in an Italian rehabilitation residential care unit . Clinical Practice and Epidemiology in Mental Health, 3(1), 23.
American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.). Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Publishing.
Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other Psychotic Disorders
D and is recommended by NICE as a primary treatment (NICE, 2018). It is seen as a cognitive-behavioural treatment combined with aspects of exposure therapy (Boudewyns & Hyer, 1996) and it works by the participant recalling the traumatic events that they experienced whilst simultaneously having their attention directed to a physical bilateral stimulation they are receiving, such as hearing tones in alternating ears, moving eyes rapidly from side to side, or tapping sensations of either side of the body. Similarly to ET, this therapy works by allowing the mind to safely experience traumatic events, letting the mind process them fully in order to heal appropriately (Shapiro, 1996). A systematic narrative review was carried out on the effectiveness of EMDR for PTSD from four randomized control trials and two meta-analyses. It was found that the therapy was able to reduce the symptoms as well as symptoms that were trauma related, and also appeared more effective than other treatments for trauma as well as effective across different cultures. However, there was a consistent limitation which was the small sample sizes. It also did not take into account the amount of people who were withdrawn from the trials. Despite this, EMDR is shown to be able to reduce the symptoms of PTSD by treating the cause of the problem (Wilson, Farrell, Barron, Hutchins, Whybrow & Kiernan, 2018). This, in turn, leads to a lessening of symptoms.
Although the above mentioned therapies may be effective at treating the psychological damages, there is evidence to show that people who suffer with PTSD have physiological changes too. A meta-analysis studied brain regions of PTSD participants compared to controls and found that the hippocampus and left amygdala volumes as well as the anterior cingulate cortex were all significantly smaller compared to controls and trauma-exposed participants (Karl, Schaefer, Malta, Dorfel, Rohleder & Werner, 2006). Other studies have made observations that there are differences in grey matter volumes, hypothalamus, and even the prefrontal cortex between PTSD participants and controls (Flemingham et al, 2009). Multiple types of medication can be prescribed to alleviate the symptoms of PTSD, and these can include anti-depressants, anti-anxiety medication and anti-psychotics (Ipser & Stein, 2012), however the most commonly used in the U.K. as a treatment for PTSD are antidepressants (De Vries, De Jonge, van den Heuvel, Turner & Roest, 201