for a diagnosis of schizophrenia to be given,
patients have to have had +2 positive/negative
symptoms for +1 month period, and had
continuous signs of disturbance for +6 months
Biological: Genes
means that a gene(s) for
schizophrenia can be passed
down from parents to children
Twin studies
Annotations:
Concordance rate (CR) - the rate at which the other twin develops symptoms
Rosenthal (1962) - studied female identical
quadruplets, all 4 girls developed
schizophrenia although they differed in terms
of age of onset and their precise symptoms
suggests that schizophrenia is genetic
however, the girls had a terrible
upbringing; both parents showed clear
signs of instability; their childhood was
disrupted due to the inability of the
parents to properly care for them
this supports the idea of
genes as maybe the parents
were slightly schizophrenic
however, if parents were
unstable, they could've created
an unstable environment
Gottesman (1991) -
CR between MZ was
48% and 17% for DZ
Annotations:
Means that if one identical twin has schizophrenia, there is a 48% chance that the other twin will also have it
however, CR's only
reflect environmental
differences as MZ are
treated more similarly
and experience more
'identity confusion'
however, Gottesman points out that the CR's
for twins reared apart and reared together are
almost the same, suggesting a biological basis
if schizophrenia
is completely
due to genetic
factors, then CR
should be 100%
Adoption studies
high CR with birth families
= genetic basis
high CR with adopted families
= environmental factors
Tienari (2000) - 6.7% of 164
adoptees who's biological mothers
had schizophrenia, had schizophrenia;
higher than the control group
supports genetics
however, children who are at a
high genetic risk tend to do well
if their adopted family provide a
supportive environment;
suggests that the environment
and genes work together
children are often placed in
adopted homes that are
similar to their birth family;
confuses the issue of genes
and environment
Psychological 1:
Psychodynamic Approach
Freud believed that schizophrenia
emerged due to a conflict between the
parts of the personality; the ego is
overwhelmed by the id or superego
as a result, the
ego regresses
back to infancy
individual has delusions of self importance (like a child);
fantasies become confused with reality as the ego tries to get
control; hallucinations and delusions will emerge
Freud argued that schizophrenics are
driven by strong sexual impulses;
helps explain why schizophrenia often
develops in late adolescence
however, no scientific evidence,
doesn't explain it biologically,
schizophrenic behaviour is not
similar to infantile behaviour as it
develops in adulthood
Psychological 3:
Stress / Life Events
Birley (1968) - after studying people who
experienced schizophrenia, if they had a
subsequent attack it was found that they
reported 2x as many stressful life events
compared with a healthy control group
Day (1987) found that schizophrenics
tended to have experienced a number of
stressful life events in the few weeks
before the onset of schizophrenia
however, van Os (1994) reported
no link between life events and the
onset of schizophrenia
patients were equally
likely to have had a
major life event or not in
the 3 months prior to
the onset of their illness