What would it mean to say that schizophrenia is a problem of living rather than a disease?

Question:

• What would it mean to say that schizophrenia is a problem of living rather than a disease? What would be the implications for treatment? In what way does society respond to people who behave in unusual ways? In 1961, the psychiatrist Thomas Szasz (1920–2012) shocked the psychiatric establishment by making a bold claim that mental illness does not exist. In his controversial book The Myth of Mental Illness, Szasz, a long-time critic of the psychiatric establishment, argued that mental illness is a myth, a convenient fiction society uses to stigmatize and subjugate people whose behavior it finds to be deviant, odd, or bizarre

(Szasz, 1960, 2011). To Szasz, the so-called mental illnesses are really “problems in living,” not diseases in the same way that influenza, hypertension, and cancer are diseases. Szasz did not dispute that the behavior of people diagnosed with schizophrenia or other mental disorders is peculiar or disturbed, nor did he deny that these individuals suffer emotional problems or have difficulties adjusting to society. However, he challenged the conventional view that strange or eccentric behavior is a product of an underlying disease. Szasz argued that treating problems as “diseases” empowers psychiatrists to put socially deviant people away in medical facilities. To Szasz, involuntary hospitalization is a form of tyranny disguised as therapy. It deprives people of human dignity and strips them of the most essential human right: liberty.

Fantastic news! We've Found the answer you've been seeking!

Step by Step Answer:

Related Book For  book-img-for-question

Abnormal Psychology In A Changing World

ISBN: 9780134484921

10th Edition

Authors: Jeffrey S Nevid, Jeffrey S Nevid PhD, Spencer A Rathus, Beverly Greene, Beverly Greene PhD

Question Posted: