These Are the Potential Causes of Schizophrenia

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MedCircle

MedCircle

Күн бұрын

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@MedCircle
@MedCircle 3 жыл бұрын
This was just one video from the MedCircle all-day Mental Health Summit. *Claim your free seat to future MedCircle Summits here: **bit.ly/38bsr88​*
@johnnygoesfast9397
@johnnygoesfast9397 3 жыл бұрын
I totally understand that MedCircle is trying to open up dialog and combat stigmas within mental health disorders; however, the mental health providers have been failing the American population within a broken healthcare system. Dont even get me started on Psychiatry, because no one wants to be a guinea-pig with meds that can ruin your life and send you into a mental tail-spin.
@Rain9Quinn
@Rain9Quinn 3 жыл бұрын
The research has identified numerous genes involved in schizophrenia. When epigenetically triggered, the disease appears. Interestingly, the combination of such triggered genes differs from patient to patient. This is why which meds to use differs and why finding the best one for ALL such afflicted patients is nearly impossible. This is relatively new data and hopefully drug companies are working on different meds to address the different subtypes of this awful disease. However, keep in mind that if genes are not turned on, as with many other inherited genetic potential for diseases, then the illness does not manifest. Living a healthy, stress managed lifestyle may prove to be critical for those with a genetic disposition for this illness. I am not a doctor. I attended a research presentation at a top psychiatric hospital a few years ago & learned of this fascinating research at that time. If younhave the disease, pls take the meds & keep pushing for more research. Each time a patient has an episode, it causes irreparable brain damage. The more episodes, the more damage. Hang on!!
@spartandrops1792
@spartandrops1792 3 жыл бұрын
@@Rain9Quinn each episode causes irreparable brain damage? tell me, where did you get this information? tell me exactly what happens in the brain, in terms of how the brain works and how the damage occurs! tell me how the determination of this takes place and why this determination is recognized as correct! could it be that you are misinformed and have not yet recognized this yourself? it is nothing but a fool's crusade, the myth of being correctly adjusted with medication! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@HaloKTS
@HaloKTS 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the information. My father has dealt with Schizophrenia as long as I've been alive. I think he's slipping back into psychosis, so I'm trying to learn as much as I can to get him help. As an aside, the Yeti is a side address microphone. It'll work better if you hang it straight up or down.
@JungleJargon
@JungleJargon 3 жыл бұрын
The medications treat the symptoms instead of the cause of schizophrenia, you should know that. The cause is what the person is believing. The person is convinced of things that are not real or true.
@andreaswilcox9158
@andreaswilcox9158 Ай бұрын
My mother developed schizophrenia at 20 years old right after she had her first child. My father was devastated but stayed with her, loved her and protected her all of his life. May they both rest in peace. Thanks for this video.
@liaqatkhan7850
@liaqatkhan7850 Ай бұрын
Your father was a real good man nice soul who stayed with your mother.
@estaisadore6188
@estaisadore6188 Ай бұрын
God bless you and how wonderful and unselfish was your dear Father...the true meaning of for better for worse.
@davidhodson7453
@davidhodson7453 19 күн бұрын
Why would your mom have you so young
@777aloha-m9z
@777aloha-m9z Күн бұрын
Same here I'm the first child . I'm taking care of her now mom. I never had a mom. Dad fell apart. Life sucked!
@normasarsby1350
@normasarsby1350 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for producing this website. My son was diagnosed with this condition over 25 years ago. At the time the doctors blamed his upbringing. I never used drugs or drinker alcohol. I tried to tell them that this was proliferate in the male side of my family but they dismissed it. My son lives a full life. At the i e of my sons’ emerging symptoms the doctors refuse to give him a diagnosis because they thought it would create stigma. However, it meant that he went years without the right treatment. I changed doctor and found someone who really cared. That was the turning point for my son’s care.
@deanaburnham9571
@deanaburnham9571 Ай бұрын
@normasarsby1350 😮❤ So very sorry you have had to go through that "social abuse." I'm calling it that--using slang for lack of a better term. It's so easy to pass the buck and blame the parent for everything that's behaviorally wrong. It appears from what I've observed is that it's primarily genetic with certain environmental influences. So often the parents are unusually better than good enough--and yet the persecution. "What did the parents do to the patient?" Wow! How hurtful. The parents are the last block on the house for these youngsters especially as they grow older! Professionals should do a they can to support the caring devoted parents who are carrying burdens with no one help them.
@feliciawebster9537
@feliciawebster9537 Ай бұрын
Need help my son is aways sick never the right medicine up and down l just don't know how to help him
@deanaburnham9571
@deanaburnham9571 Ай бұрын
@normasarsby Pardon me please. My response is not relevant to what you shared. It appears I might have responded in part to a different comment. Not sure how I did that, but it's not the first time. I'm using a small phone like many and I find navigating the comment area a little challenging at times. And BTW I'm glad you have a more caring doctor now.
@Thinkoutsidedabox1
@Thinkoutsidedabox1 3 жыл бұрын
This needs more attention. The stigma of schizophrenia is terrible. If I knew about this information I could of helped my younger brother better. He took his life 3 years ago and I have never been the same.
@sandraa8038
@sandraa8038 3 жыл бұрын
I’m so sorry for your loss. 😢
@sunshine9122
@sunshine9122 3 жыл бұрын
My condolences. May your brother rest in eternal peace. 🙏❤
@debramercer5896
@debramercer5896 3 жыл бұрын
Just remember he's free and at Peace. God loves us unconditionally, so don't think your brother is in a bad place. He's back Home. I know how much you miss him. I lost my younger brother to the lifelong effects of schizophrenia and other related ailments. He came to me in a dream like I asked him to. He showed me the biggest smile, new body and even a couple funny jokes. That's how he was... very comical and still is. I will be with him, and all my loved ones, again. I know this down deep in my soul. I had an NDE once. 🙏🌷❤️🦋✌️
@vickicarnes6860
@vickicarnes6860 3 жыл бұрын
It's a hard Illness to watch in someone you love. I so worry about my son and idk how to help him.. Hugs!!
@debramercer5896
@debramercer5896 3 жыл бұрын
@@vickicarnes6860 kzbin.info/www/bejne/gqDLh4N9irGMprM
@justcallmesuzzie
@justcallmesuzzie 2 жыл бұрын
I want to thank you for this series. I grew up with an older brother who suffered from this condition. Neither of my parents had this, no environmental issues, no drug use. We did look back to see where it might have come from as the doctors worked with my brother and my mother's brother was "an odd" man who spent his time alone, never got married or dated, lived a full life and had a career, and later in his life he became a hermit with very instilled routines. Once the doctors heard his symptoms, it was believed he developed the beginnings of the condition but never full blown Schizophrenia. My uncle never went into the doctor to be evaluated because he had a fear of doctors and the family did not want to push him and maybe cause further damage mentally. The only "trigger" for my brother we could come up with was his engagement to his girl friend. We think he realized that he was going to be responsible for his wife and potential children which scared him into going deeper into his head space triggering the "voices" he started to hear only a month or two after he was engaged. As an adult, I managed my brother's care with doctors and halfway homes or apartments and he lived a full life as long as he was on his medications. I remember fighting for his right to go to college and study the field of his choice. The college did not want to admit him into nursing school because of his diagnosis. Once I confronted them with the knowledge that it was illegal for them to deny him the right to his education they admitted him into nursing school. He went on to nursing school and graduated at the top of his class but was never allowed to practice because of his condition. He did tutor other nursing students for several years helping them get their nursing license because of his extreme knowledge in the field (He was the only "graduate" to ace all the exit exams with 100% on ALL exams in the history of the program.) It was difficult explaining to him why he would never be able to practice as a nurse. He had a tendency to stop taking his medications periodically and that was the reason he would never be able to practice nursing. Yes, he had his moments but 90% of the time he was an amazing brother. When I got phone calls from him, I could always tell when he had stopped taking his medications within the first 3 minutes of our phone conversations. Once off the phone with him and I knew he was off his medications, I would call his care team and ask them to head to his apartment for a wellness check and get him back on his medications. His care team were so good at convincing him to take his medications. He only ended up in the hospital 3-4 times in his entire life. I have to admit I was really tough on him when he decided to get off his medications by giving him 2 choices. Either you take the medications or you go to the hospital. He hated the hospital so he chose to take them on his own most of the time.
@GirlsGoneJesus
@GirlsGoneJesus 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for loving your brother in this manner. And thank you for sharing his story and your experience. I recently lost my teenage love in a house fire. He was schizophrenic and his mental illness unfortunately didn’t allow him to escape this accident. When we were dating, he admitted himself into a psychiatric ward because he heard voices telling him to end his life. I was too young and inexperienced to understand this mental illness back then. Even so, I wanted to love him through this. However, he ended our relationship shortly after. I was crushed but looking back, I understand now why he did this. I thought about him all the 10 years, always thinking of him fondly. He was a beautiful soul with a kind and gentle heart. I heard of the accident just last week and I am now researching schizophrenia and understanding it for the first time in my life. I always thought these people were simply “crazy.” 😔 I now understand some people’s brains are wired differently causing them to behave differently. How I wish I could have loved him through all of this and he may have led a fulfilling life. But I didn’t and I hope my journey leads me to help others to understand more. Thank you again for this honest comment. God bless you and your Brother.
@brionakennedy2846
@brionakennedy2846 2 жыл бұрын
Don't die of schizophrenia/mental illness, learn about the best treatment kzbin.info/www/bejne/r2iziZd_fZ2cqbM
@emilydonohue7083
@emilydonohue7083 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this. My dad has schizophrenia, and medications have made him so much better. When he was at his worst, I was too young to understand the reason for his behavior. He went to the hospital for 6 months, and I wasn’t allowed to see him at all. Fortunately, I remember his absence more than I remember the way he acted when he was there. Both of my parents did a good job shielding me when his illness was at it’s worst. He’s so much better now. I’m so lucky to live in a time and place where these medications are available.
@onevenus6040
@onevenus6040 2 жыл бұрын
You're an awesome sister. God bless you.
@RabbitHoleDiaries
@RabbitHoleDiaries 2 жыл бұрын
You are an AMAZING sister. If this ever fully manifests for me (family history of it, most of the females on my mom's side), I pray someone will help me as you did for your brother. My grandmother would stop taking her meds from time to time too, and we would contact my uncle who lived close to her and he would get her to take them again. I loved my grandmother so much. I met a girl once who had schizophrenia. She and I were great friends briefly until she moved back to her home state to be with her mom, and we eventually lost touch. Melody "Mel". Great gal, super kind soul, I miss her.
@kudezamiah8125
@kudezamiah8125 10 ай бұрын
trauma, over thinking even over sensitivity (people who have a hard time handling their emotions who were never taught emotional intelligence ) can potentially lead to suffering mental disorders. Disorders like PTSD, CPTSD ,black and white thinking, distorted thinking, catastrophizing can lead to deep states of severe depression which can lead to severe anxiety and so on... one mental state can potentially lead to another
@hanaezra9452
@hanaezra9452 2 ай бұрын
Yesssss
@carolburmeister3044
@carolburmeister3044 Ай бұрын
Exactly. Its not a brain disease.
@BettieEatchel
@BettieEatchel Ай бұрын
Is there any connection to bipolar.?
@tamerachurch3881
@tamerachurch3881 Ай бұрын
Strep PANDAS too
@ashuhhhlee1509
@ashuhhhlee1509 Ай бұрын
@@BettieEatchelits on a spectrum. im schizoaffective so that basically means i have both. professionals believe mood and psychotic disorders (schizophrenia) are correlated somehow
@39zhanna
@39zhanna 3 жыл бұрын
That’s what happened to my son at age 18 when he started college , he was so smart and so talented in sports, music, art, very intellectual. At age 18 he started to have all symptoms of schizophrenia , doctors put him on medication to control his psychosis symptoms . Now he is 29, no more psychosis or voices since he started medication but he is not the same person as he was before 18, he is like a child with very low functioning . He still has little paranoia. Able to go to work 5 days a week at the Peter Piper Pizza for a last 7 years.
@EAT2POWER3
@EAT2POWER3 2 жыл бұрын
I have a brother it's been 10years of suffering
@yell1481
@yell1481 2 жыл бұрын
I am sad to hear your son's story but l am glad that he is stable to work and contribute to society. I am also mother of my lovely son who suffers from psychosis. I am working hard to overcome my negative thinkings and be positive with my son in future. Thank you.
@39zhanna
@39zhanna 2 жыл бұрын
@@yell1481 🙏 thank you. Is your son taking any medication for psychosis? I’m very sorry to hear that, I was in so much stress and fear when my son had his Psychotic episodes. Wishing him to find help and to get better .
@39zhanna
@39zhanna 2 жыл бұрын
@@EAT2POWER3 sorry to hear that. Is he getting any help?
@kathleenkelly264
@kathleenkelly264 2 жыл бұрын
Holding a job for 7 years is quite the accomplishment.
@mrs.doubtfire9335
@mrs.doubtfire9335 3 жыл бұрын
I was diagnosed schizoaffective this year. Trying my best to understand myself
@brianamyrvik2038
@brianamyrvik2038 3 жыл бұрын
I wish you the absolute best in your journey.💛
@mrs.doubtfire9335
@mrs.doubtfire9335 3 жыл бұрын
@@brianamyrvik2038 thank you 💛💛
@mrs.doubtfire9335
@mrs.doubtfire9335 3 жыл бұрын
@Paranoid Rabbit thank you 💛💛😊
@damianmoore8147
@damianmoore8147 3 жыл бұрын
I hope that you can work out a pathway forward. Good luck!
@mrs.doubtfire9335
@mrs.doubtfire9335 3 жыл бұрын
@@damianmoore8147 thank you! 💛
@beejoy6153
@beejoy6153 3 жыл бұрын
Excellent explanation. My brother had this awful disease and died at the age of 49 in 2019 while living homeless. I tried to help him but was unsuccessful. What the Doctor said is factual and my brother was unfortunately exposed to all of the causes. We had an extremely abusive upbringing and my brother took the brunt of our fathers abuse. He was exposed to drugs and alcohol at an early age and used until the day he died. He also had head trauma and I believe that the gene runs in our family. He was such a beautiful soul, despite this terrible disease. He was taken too soon and suffered unjustly. Thank you for the video and I subscribed and liked.
@sakinahjanan9546
@sakinahjanan9546 3 жыл бұрын
How difficult that must have been for you. And probably still is. 😔
@beejoy6153
@beejoy6153 3 жыл бұрын
@@sakinahjanan9546 thank you and it is. He was such a beautiful soul and I will forever miss my big brother.
@sakinahjanan9546
@sakinahjanan9546 3 жыл бұрын
@@beejoy6153 he is at peace now so I hope you find your peace too. Take care
@beejoy6153
@beejoy6153 3 жыл бұрын
@@sakinahjanan9546 🤗
@marymaher4036
@marymaher4036 3 жыл бұрын
@@beejoy6153 ,Heartfelt Sympathy to you, Rebekah, for the loss of your big brother.He will forever be in your Heart .♥
@sourcherri3750
@sourcherri3750 2 жыл бұрын
I randomly developed schizophrenia one day when I was 25. I don't even drink or do any drugs whatsoever. I started showing symptoms when I got in a relationship and I was highly stressed out.
@keroberos2781
@keroberos2781 Жыл бұрын
That was your trigger maybe.
@jeanpaultongeren125
@jeanpaultongeren125 Жыл бұрын
how many episodes did you have. Maybe you can go without medication (aka anti psycotics)
@Aboguaboga
@Aboguaboga Жыл бұрын
It’s the formation stage of relationships that trigger my positive systems most of the time
@sourcherri3750
@sourcherri3750 11 ай бұрын
@@keroberos2781 Yupp. Triggered me into psychosis
@sourcherri3750
@sourcherri3750 11 ай бұрын
@@jeanpaultongeren125 it was a 7 month long psychotic episode. I haven’t had any since cuz I’m taking seroquel now
@jacquelinejohnson2956
@jacquelinejohnson2956 Жыл бұрын
I got schizophrenia at 21 yrs. Old. It was in 1986 that i was having severe symptoms. It is 2023 and through working with psychiatrists and counselors they put together the blessed cocktail to make me better. There is defianetly hope:)
@JackTheJackedUpJag
@JackTheJackedUpJag 5 ай бұрын
My husband was diagnosed recently and he's on his 3rd round of a new medication this gives us hope :)
@ihitsingh3734
@ihitsingh3734 4 ай бұрын
Hey bro do you mind if i ask you about what do you think caused your illness according to you?
@jacquelinejohnson2956
@jacquelinejohnson2956 4 ай бұрын
@@ihitsingh3734 it was paranoia that started the whole thing and it escalated into a more severe mental, physical, and emotional state.
@aethylwulfeiii6502
@aethylwulfeiii6502 3 ай бұрын
The cursed cocktail is haldol or any of the old antipsychotics. Damn nearly killed me.
@jamespeace1237
@jamespeace1237 3 ай бұрын
What us the Ned my friend has this she's young too ..
@christinemurphy4367
@christinemurphy4367 2 жыл бұрын
I REALLY appreciate the professionalism and compassion even more that you both have around this topic. It’s sad and scary to experience these things and symptoms in life regardless of the age or cause. It’s terrifying and very upsetting both to the individual and family, but the ignorance, mocking, insulting and belittling is truly sad and worsens the condition of the patient.
@TonyGalla-kw4hw
@TonyGalla-kw4hw Ай бұрын
I worked advocacy for mentally ill, disabled people. I hated the term mentally ill. Still do. I found that most were severly depressed, and if hospitalized, experienced (not always) abuse, neglect and stigma. I treated them as I wanted to be treated. I saw treatments back in the day, that would not be allowed today. I saw some of the most compassionate people in the world in "mental" hospitals. I was never threatened, physically harmed, or spoken to in a vulger way, but had access to those considered criminally insane. I met many schizophrenic people. I saw deep sadness, fear and lonliness, along with great empathy and intelligence. If I was in the violent offender ward, the patients would warn me when they were incapable of meeting with me. Most were medicated. I'll never forget them. I loved them.
@sweetea7035
@sweetea7035 3 жыл бұрын
My grandson was diagnosed in 2014. It's 2021 and I've lived in a constant state of grief over this. He was my golden boy. In college, ambitious and a loving beautiful boy....now he's gone, but he's still here. I feel like I'm in a crowded room screaming and no one can hear me. It guts families to the core. The worst thing I've ever had to bear. So many families suffering because no one understands the depth of grief we experience ....it's so hard to watch them slowly die...😭
@jenniferr3032
@jenniferr3032 3 жыл бұрын
Why do y say he died slowly? Was he on medication
@giovannamoro8564
@giovannamoro8564 3 жыл бұрын
Dear lady i'm sorry to hear about your grandson. Something must have happened it can't appear out of the blu. There must have been signs . Please recall the facts , be an investigator and follow your instincts . It could be anything , relationship with the family, some illnesses , love life, frienships, drugs,personality,fears . Don't let anything out. Follow your guts instinct.
@sweetea7035
@sweetea7035 3 жыл бұрын
@@giovannamoro8564 yes it was actually all the above. He smoked a LOT of pot, his mother was crazy, he found his father dead, he was in a sexual relationship with a teacher in high school. When he graduated and they parted, he had a breakdown. He broke under the pressure. 7 yrs later he is so delusional he thinks he's still in a relationship with the teacher. I've had him in counseling but nothing changes, he thinks they're all stupid. Even the meds don't make him see reality. Thanks for your input.
@jacquelinesteele4305
@jacquelinesteele4305 3 жыл бұрын
So sorry!!
@angievega3128
@angievega3128 2 жыл бұрын
Same here my son was diagnosed in 2013 he is now 34, U have described exactly my situation I can't take it anymore it is the worse torture to live with, now I'm sick my self with anxiety and depression and no desire to live
@TheNomad2727
@TheNomad2727 2 жыл бұрын
My best friend in my high school days is schizophrenic and he is pretty much a text book example of what they said in this video... his mother suffered from something (im unsure from what exactly) then from his mid teens he started smoking Pot, his brain would not have been fully develpoed at that age and then when being 20, he started showing signs of something being wrong. Not long after his 21st birthday he had some sort of breakdown and was diagnosed with schitoprenia. The scary thing is, I started hearing voices from smoking pot around the age of 17 the last few times I smoked, so I stopped completly.... I remember telling him this at the time about this, and thats why I was no longer smoking pot (I would still hang around my stoner mates) , and he said he was hearing strange things too......He kept going and is unrecognisable from schizophrenia to what he was back then. The thing is, out of all of our stoner group of about 10 or 15, we were the only ones to have a negative mental reaction. I still see many of them around from time to time and only about 2 of the group still smoke.... eventually most give it up. I am so glad I stopped though, so if anybody is reading this who hears or starts feeling very negative situations from smoking dope...STOP immediatly, because if you try to just "ride it out" and keep smoking, from what Ive gathered, after a few months or maybe years, the negative feelings that happen when high, never go away, even when you dont smoke Pot, it becomes permanent, and your once normal life becomes a true life of hell. Imagine it like this..... the "paranoia" that I was able to joke a laugh about from getting high back then NEVER goes away
@patrickphilip777
@patrickphilip777 7 ай бұрын
That is what happened to me but I started smoking for the first time when I was 21 and did not start smoking often until I was 23. In summer 2020 I had 3 months of psychosis and a horrible delusion known as cotard's syndrome.
@juanitaross5492
@juanitaross5492 3 жыл бұрын
My nephew has been living with schizophrenia for 40 years. He came down with it at 18 while in college. He has 3 voices living in his head and knows their names and sex. He wanted so bad to get better and talks about the day when he gets better going back to college. I know at the time he came down with this he was drinking alot of alcohol with his friends. His mother sought out mental health for him early on but his psychologist miss diagnose him for years with light depression. He has tried to kill himself 4 times. He doesn't want these voices living in his head. When he was asked why he tried to commit suicide, he said the people living inside me said to do it because they are sick and tired of living in his body. He is now in a wonderful mental health home called Hopewell in Ohio surrounded with gardens, livestock, chickens, horses and 350 acres of heaven. Consular and a nurse who see to his medication every day. But sadly the medications don't work forever. They are forever having to change prescriptions to accommodate his body and brain. My heart goes out to everyone living with this disease of the brain. God did not create everyone equal.
@faithm9284
@faithm9284 3 жыл бұрын
God did create everyone with value because he suffered for us all. Someone in the comments suggested niacin to help, and I wrote of a man cured. It isn't being treated as a physical illness which it should be. Something went off kilter when your nephew was in college. He needs to be upfront with what happened, to dig down to the cause of cellular structure of the brain that has caused the brain to change. It's important to begin to find a cure. My research tells a story of physical, not mental.
@juanitaross5492
@juanitaross5492 3 жыл бұрын
@@faithm9284 , thanks for the feedback. Doctors and counselors are working with him . It has helped him understand his condition .
@patriciavandevelde5469
@patriciavandevelde5469 3 жыл бұрын
If there was a god this horror would not exist
@juanitaross5492
@juanitaross5492 3 жыл бұрын
@@patriciavandevelde5469 , I agree we are not all created equal.
@patriciavandevelde5469
@patriciavandevelde5469 3 жыл бұрын
My dog has a better life
@erinhouchin52
@erinhouchin52 Жыл бұрын
Siczophrenia for me was caused by childhood trauma.I had no where to run so it made my perception of reality snap..I started with delusional thinking ,hulucatations and eventually voices at age 13.What has helped me is medication.. psych ..therapists and my relationship with God.I still have some lingering symptoms but I remain positive and am learning to be gentle to myself.I grew up thinking I had to hide my diagnosis because of the stigma but I'm breaking this now to share because I know I'm not alone and I'd love to help because I understand
@amigosleo6588
@amigosleo6588 Жыл бұрын
Can you please share your mobile no.
@Miss_Millie_
@Miss_Millie_ 11 ай бұрын
What meds did you find helpful? Do you believe in Jesus or someone else. If Jesus, have you tried deliverance?
@genniferpaulgomez3028
@genniferpaulgomez3028 3 ай бұрын
I believe there is my God, & my daughter suffer with schizophrenia, which, she herself diganosed because the professionals are confused in what to do to help people like her. I believe that by loving my daughter & letting her know I am there for her, no matter what she go through in life❤🙏🏽
@mamajo5867
@mamajo5867 2 жыл бұрын
My mom and dad and uncle and aunt all suffer from schizophrenia. My grandma and grandpas all had dementia or died young. They all had exposure to trauma and substance abuse. I struggle with mental illness when I don’t get enough sleep or I experience stress and I eat poorly and don’t exercise. My memory is bad and my thought structure doesn’t always make sense. When I became a Christian, I started living more consistently, having more structure in my life and less mental confusions and broken thinking. Stress and lack of sleep really make things harder on me. I don’t use any substances at all and for good reason after watching my whole family suffer on substances my whole life. I’m hoping to learn more about schizophrenia to help my family heal.
@Miss_Millie_
@Miss_Millie_ 11 ай бұрын
As a Christian, have you tried deliverance?
@mafreaponte562
@mafreaponte562 2 жыл бұрын
This is so sad. I grew up watching my mother with this disease. I'm glad there's more acces to information today.
@rabiumuhammadu7938
@rabiumuhammadu7938 2 жыл бұрын
It’s amazing how much they know about herpes. I was raped in 2019 and got symptoms, I couldn’t walk at all. The Doctor didn’t have any clue only (Dr.Ani John) on KZbin has the complete medication.
@Christine-og4ni
@Christine-og4ni 2 жыл бұрын
It is spiritual
@gotakearisk4263
@gotakearisk4263 Жыл бұрын
@@Christine-og4ni agree
@kelseyadkins9762
@kelseyadkins9762 2 ай бұрын
​@@Christine-og4ni You're idiotic.
@jamiedunning9650
@jamiedunning9650 3 жыл бұрын
My son is suffering from Paranoid Schizophrenia,he is currently in a mental Health facility,he is about to get discharged and his Dr asked what his goals were when he gets out and he replied he wanted to get back on drugs ,this information worried me immensely and l am worried he could have another episode when he is discharged,so l am trying to organise Drug Rehabilitation for when he gets out but l am so worried he won't follow up with Rehab and he may put his wellbeing at risk.The worry can be so overwhelming at times,l feel lost as a Father and l love my son more than words can say,Praying for a good outcome so one day he and l can have a relationship that only grows stronger! Thankyou for the information you have put into this video! From Jimmy ,Nowra NSW, Australia!
@macpduff2119
@macpduff2119 3 жыл бұрын
God thank you for protecting me. My mother was a life time institutionalized patient with Schitzophrenia. When in College i foolishly experimented with many drugs during the 1960's. I'm grateful for being spared
@co8885
@co8885 2 жыл бұрын
You are because in my family or my sons dad family is no cases and still he abuses cannabis and used one time mushroom and he is in acute psychosis
@dfms3485
@dfms3485 2 жыл бұрын
God doesn't help you because he doesn't exist, you only have a lot of luck, because if a god that only help some people and others no, like me that I never use drugs and alcohol and I developed schizophrenia, he is a pure evil god.
@ralph7545
@ralph7545 3 жыл бұрын
The doctor knows his stuff. Good interview.
@luismiguelromo3692
@luismiguelromo3692 3 жыл бұрын
Yup he knows about the 1%. The Locos. Mutation. Genetic
@trolloftheyear7963
@trolloftheyear7963 3 жыл бұрын
I know a very talented painter who smoked pot, then took some LSD. 10 years later he is still hearing voices. You never know what drugs can do to you.
@joankersting2358
@joankersting2358 2 жыл бұрын
Too true!
@miriambochenek9083
@miriambochenek9083 2 жыл бұрын
Even the prescribed drugs and the innocent immunizations. Now they pushed on my pregnant nices Covid vax...and she is sick with covid. What a nonsense
@CJ-jp3zw
@CJ-jp3zw 2 жыл бұрын
LSD opens up crown chakra. That means he recklessly open up that chakra for more 'enlightenment' but in truth, he has spirits attached to him
@Miss_Millie_
@Miss_Millie_ 11 ай бұрын
​@@CJ-jp3zwsame as DMT
@scarface-online
@scarface-online 11 ай бұрын
@@CJ-jp3zw correct answer
@carilynjurgeson6178
@carilynjurgeson6178 3 жыл бұрын
My mother has paranoid schizophrenia and now dementia. She was severely abused as a child. Her mother who was an alcoholic tried to abort her unsuccessfully, then told her as a child that she wasn't wanted. She was tortured and constantly in and out of orphanages. They didn't have much to eat and would ask the butcher for bones for the dog, but it was to make soup. My older brother is also mentally ill. Thankfully me and my younger brother are not mentally ill, but being raised by a schizophrenic mother and a father who was not home much had some negative effects. It was like we were kids trying to take care of ourselves. Now my mom is bedridden and I care for her 24/7. Some of the psych meds cause permanent damage and they don't work forever. Do your research.
@Jenifer_G
@Jenifer_G Жыл бұрын
Understand what you went through. Best to you.
@ineskowal9240
@ineskowal9240 Жыл бұрын
My mom had similar story.. also brought up with abuse.. not sure what else, bc she didn't like to talk about it..
@Miss_Millie_
@Miss_Millie_ 11 ай бұрын
What meds are you referring to please so I can read up on them more. I was on quetiapine for years but it didn't help, now I'm on olanzapine but that just makes me sleep ALL the time.
@janetlieb2507
@janetlieb2507 2 жыл бұрын
I went through the nightmare of becoming ill in college. My grandfather had this and was hospitalized several times. I experienced abuse from both parents.
@AmyRAgner
@AmyRAgner 2 жыл бұрын
Yes…I’m one of the loved ones trying to understand & help my son. I appreciate these videos so much!!!!
@co8885
@co8885 2 жыл бұрын
Same. Mine abuses cannabis so we don’t even have a diagnosis yet
@highpowerincontrol9731
@highpowerincontrol9731 2 жыл бұрын
Good job at trying to understand, some people In my experience brush things off and te me to stop acting strange or tell me I can do certain things when I really just can't, they all just throw it off as being lazy or just not a people person when I isolate myself
@lizzponce
@lizzponce 2 жыл бұрын
My son has psychosis and was told drug induced psychosis. He was clean for 5 years seemed okay with just his injection and started drugs again only to be diagnosed now with schizophrenia by the emergency room.
@karysal822
@karysal822 2 жыл бұрын
I feel you. I'm trying to help my son as well. It's really frustrating to see our son's going through this.
@apriljtechnology3560
@apriljtechnology3560 2 жыл бұрын
@@lizzponce Mine too
@777Rowen
@777Rowen 3 жыл бұрын
I watch the KZbin channel called Living Well with Schizophrenia. It’s a very informative and shows what people with schizophrenia experience in their daily life. Excellent explanation
@TarotLadyLissa
@TarotLadyLissa 2 жыл бұрын
My nephew was in the army. He joined at 18. He made SGT and was so proud. He came home in 2010 from Iraq and Afghanistan with severe PTSD and schizophrenia. He had both auditory and visual hallucinations for years. It was so severe that he rarely had a moment of lucidity. He was in an almost constant state of delusion. He sought help many times but in his delusional state he stopped taking his meds and seeing his therapist. Two weeks ago he took his own life. He had said a few times that he was going to do it. He said he just wanted to make the voices stop. My sister and her husband had him put on a 72 hour psychiatric hold, several times because of his statements. Even with all of love and support we could possibly give him, he still pulled that trigger. I just don’t know how to reconcile that in my mind. I’ve been researching schizophrenia and PTSD looking for answers, but instead I just have more questions.
@TarotLadyLissa
@TarotLadyLissa 2 жыл бұрын
@@miriambochenek9083 With all due respect, please don't turn my nephew's death into an anti-vax soapbox for which you can stand on. It's just plain disrespectful.
@miriambochenek9083
@miriambochenek9083 2 жыл бұрын
@@TarotLadyLissa Yes I respect what you said. On the other hand do your research what the companies put into vaxs. Just give your self sometime to educate on it. Knowledge is a power and a lie repeated 1000x it is starting to be a new truth.. A lot of people are waking up . Don't sleep ....Wake up with many
@Shannonluvsuful
@Shannonluvsuful 2 жыл бұрын
My heart goes out to you for your loss
@roseparton9694
@roseparton9694 2 жыл бұрын
My sister pulled the trigger too
@G-Sagittastellium
@G-Sagittastellium 2 жыл бұрын
I’m so very sorry for you and your family’s loss
@dianabrettrager341
@dianabrettrager341 Жыл бұрын
My oldest son developed schizophrenia with onset at age 20-21. He is not a substance abuser of any kind but I developed pre-eclampsia during pregnancy and he was born at 31 weeks and weighed 2 1/4 pounds at birth. I was very healthy at the time, running 10K's and half marathons so it was puzzling to the doctors that I developed this condition. He was my first born child, and I have one other son who has no psychiatric conditions. I have read before that pre-term babies have a higher risk of schizophrenia than the general population and sadly for us this became a reality. I am so grateful to find websites like this one that help to further educate myself on this issue.
@cindyd1042
@cindyd1042 7 ай бұрын
Thank you for this series on schizophrenia. My niece developed this horrible mental disease. She developed it at age 44, after 25 years of drug abuse.
@christinemurphy4367
@christinemurphy4367 2 жыл бұрын
I had an “experience “ or episode “ of schizophrenia or maybe psychosis back in 2017. I wasn’t diagnosed with schizophrenia but I had about 3/4 of the symptoms lasting nearly 4 months. I wasn’t afraid at the time and attributed my experience to spiritual causes but I am not sure today by any means what in or out of this world happened to me. To say it was disturbing is an understatement and my family was beyond worried and concerned. It is still a mystery to me and I am trying to accept that will never know what truly happened and why. Thank you anyway for this video. It’s much appreciated 😊❤
@farzanajumaye3822
@farzanajumaye3822 2 жыл бұрын
Christine thank you for sharing this because a spiritual experience allows on to see the other realm similar to an altered state of consciousness that medium goes into. It's not a mental health issue, only sensitive people experience this.
@Miss_Millie_
@Miss_Millie_ 11 ай бұрын
So you think it was due to a spiritual cause but what makes you think that? Did you dabble in the occult, participate in a seance or ouija board, cast a spell? No psychedelic drug usage??
@Loyal.Laika.Dog13
@Loyal.Laika.Dog13 Жыл бұрын
My best most beloved friend struggles with Schitzophrenia & Bipolar Disorder and he is a genius. My boyfriend has a less severe form of Schitzophrenia from a TBI he got in a serious car accident. I have a real tender spot for anyone with this illness. The good news is, medications exist and they help so much. 💜
@Jamie-h8f6o
@Jamie-h8f6o 9 ай бұрын
Most of us are
@lulazeta8965
@lulazeta8965 4 ай бұрын
TBI ????
@mkmason2002
@mkmason2002 2 жыл бұрын
Our neighbor, an 18 yr old male, used pot occasionally. No history of mental illness. One day { at 18} he smoked pot and became psychotic and was rushed to the ER. He has been psychotic/schizophrenic now for 15 years. He is no longer in touch with reality.
@rochelledunk5163
@rochelledunk5163 3 жыл бұрын
They didn't discuss alcohol much. Being from an area where alcohol is used heavily, I know of numerous people who drink a lot everyday. Some of them seem to be damaged emotionally and mentally. I wish alcohol had been more of the discussion.
@Tatianna07
@Tatianna07 3 жыл бұрын
Alcohol is a drug
@itscourtney218
@itscourtney218 3 жыл бұрын
I haven't had a drink in almost 5 years but I used to drink heavily, to the point of withdrawal seizures multiple times before I stopped this last time. I can tell you that when I was withdrawing from alcohol I had hallucinations, delusions and paranoia. I still get flashes of these feelings years later. I also have a brother who is schizophrenic and our biological grandmother as well. So what this doctor is saying makes sense. I also suffered severe abuse and childhood trauma so that could be why I get these feelings sometime.
@debramercer5896
@debramercer5896 3 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/gqDLh4N9irGMprM
@debramercer5896
@debramercer5896 3 жыл бұрын
@@itscourtney218 kzbin.info/www/bejne/gqDLh4N9irGMprM kzbin.info/www/bejne/hIC8fImuZqd5pKs
@debramercer5896
@debramercer5896 3 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/hIC8fImuZqd5pKs
@gkbart
@gkbart 2 жыл бұрын
SUUUUPER important information. I wish this was taught in high school and college, and that more people were aware about the connection of marajiuana use and psychosis/mental health. It's pushed so much in society that weed is healthy and fun and doesn't kill. But it can be what triggers mental instability and harmful actions by the person. Thank you for this video. I hope young people watch this and take their choices seriously.
@youtubename7819
@youtubename7819 2 жыл бұрын
And it clearly is addictive for some people. Popular opinion goes on and on about how it’s not a physiochemical addiction but I’ve known way too many people who have ruined their lives and their mental and financial health because they just can’t stop CONSTANTLY smoking weed. They are clearly addicted.
@vkkna
@vkkna 2 жыл бұрын
@@youtubename7819 I found it addicting like nicotine. Makes sense
@gkbart
@gkbart 2 жыл бұрын
@@youtubename7819 exactly! and those people say no I'm not addicted, it just helps me relax and I do it at least a couple times a day every day. If you can't live without something, you rely on it to make you feel "normal" and if you stop doing it you get aggittated and can't stop thinking about it.....that's addiction!
@live7256
@live7256 Жыл бұрын
What you said is true my son has this problem and think maraijuana is best medicine for him but it destroy his life he can not hold jobs
@gkbart
@gkbart Жыл бұрын
Best case scenario, he can replace one habit with a healthier habit that helps the same or even better. Or having another source of outlet for expression/relaxation. Like the working out, painting, playing an instrument, learning a language, cooking, etc. Something to put his brain power towards and focus on, to keep his thoughts from drifting into an unhealthy place. Hope things go towards the positive for him! Our bodies and minds are very forgiving and as much as we harm it, it's possible to heal and improve. @@live7256
@paradisecolors
@paradisecolors 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing such important content. This one is really sad, unless the person actually chooses to seek professional help and receives proper treatment
@Jamie-h8f6o
@Jamie-h8f6o 9 ай бұрын
I have it got help and they drugged me out so much I couldn't function I take not much medicine now I can't afford it anymore I have no relationship with anyone anymore no one understand
@Jamie-h8f6o
@Jamie-h8f6o 9 ай бұрын
There is no proper treatment
@stevec3872
@stevec3872 3 жыл бұрын
My 30 year old daughter is now diagnosed schizoaffective-bipolar, originally schizophrenia at 17. She has a maternal grandmother who had schizophrenia as a young woman. At 16 my daughter had a boyfriend who got her into smoking marijuana & using magic mushrooms. I've thought of it as she had the sleeping dog of schizophrenia within her & that awakened the sleeping dog, completely changing her life for the worse. She is still on the road to recovery years later.
@vitalucas9452
@vitalucas9452 Жыл бұрын
Research supports your beliefs.
@musicandpoetry_8
@musicandpoetry_8 Жыл бұрын
I have bipolar in my family and not schizophrenia, but I have some traits of schizophrenia..it’s scary :((
@musicandpoetry_8
@musicandpoetry_8 Жыл бұрын
Started out with severe depression
@musicandpoetry_8
@musicandpoetry_8 Жыл бұрын
But I’m sorry your daughter is going through that :(( I’ve heard of drugs setting off schizophrenia before
@JaneThomas-b3l
@JaneThomas-b3l Ай бұрын
I worked with schizophrenics for years of all ages. Some able to stabilize through medications and unfortunately some were not. Prayers to all those affected with this diagnosis😢❤😢
@rick3747
@rick3747 3 жыл бұрын
I am not a health professional but I do have 45 years of dealing with family and friends of whom 7 have/had Schizophernia/Schizo-effective/Bipolar. I feel very strongly that all three conditions have a very strong basis in severe childhood abuse esp sexual abuse and/or head trauma(numerous concussions). Add a gentle temperment like an Introvert/HSP/Empath mixed with longterm nutritional issues and you can get Schizophernia/Schizo-effective/Bipolar showing up as early as the teens.
@marissaalonzo7997
@marissaalonzo7997 3 жыл бұрын
I'm sure that's true statistically but our child had none of those stressors. A one time drug use did seem to flip the switch early but they told us it was mostly inevitable by age 30 anyway.
@Miss_Millie_
@Miss_Millie_ 11 ай бұрын
Of the family members, is it all through 1 side - mum or dad's? Or both??
@Latoree33
@Latoree33 3 жыл бұрын
My brother was diagnosed in the late 1960's early 1970's. Went through a lot of pills which he had tic's from them. He was like a guinea pig to see how these pills worked. He said he heard voices telling him what to do. He died at 23 yrs old. I do believe it was genetic.
@Tigerrfeet
@Tigerrfeet 3 жыл бұрын
I believe it is genetic also
@magdalena.slavova
@magdalena.slavova 3 жыл бұрын
How did he die?
@Latoree33
@Latoree33 3 жыл бұрын
@@magdalena.slavova they said he jumped in front of a train. I'm sure this is what was in his head. Our rough childhood didn't help any.
@magdalena.slavova
@magdalena.slavova 3 жыл бұрын
@@Latoree33 Thank you for answering. I was wondering if it was some additional illness that had developed due to schizophrenia, but it is not the cause.
@Latoree33
@Latoree33 3 жыл бұрын
@@magdalena.slavova I believe all mental illness can drive you to commit suicide in some way or another. People today do not realize how much mental illness there was in the past and they're quick fixes were to make themselves happy and drink alcohol.
@10HDFLHX
@10HDFLHX 2 жыл бұрын
I'm glad to see that the medical profession has switched gears somewhat on treatment for this disease. back in the 60's when my oldest sister was diagnosed with it, the doctors weren't very helpful to the family. She was of the age of majority (over 18) and would not tell the family any information at all about what her condition was. The only advice one doctor gave them was "wash your hands of her". Seriously! There are still problems for families even today. There is someone in my son's extended family (wife's sister) who just recently presented with symptoms, and they feel helpless to help her. It's not like they can make her take her medicine. She's in denial that there is anything wrong with her and they fear that she will continue her downward spiral.. It's so sad...
@mjtegan4839
@mjtegan4839 3 жыл бұрын
Both of these gentleman’s intelligence is exceedingly handsome! The information in this video has been a wealth of education! I want to express my gratitude for such a well spoken and articulate understanding of this topic. Your content has been an excellent wealth of information. My best friend’s son has struggled immensely and the effect’s of his diagnosis on their family and his mother has been such a horrific impact to their lives. Watching this family struggle with such a rollercoaster of emotional stress and sorrow; is truly heartbreaking and gives me such a great feeling of helplessness. I just can’t thank you enough for giving this topic a voice. I do agree that the hereditary along with drugs in adolescence and environment and/or trauma has a huge impact on helping the cause. I say helping bc it’s hard to single out anything bc as you have clarified there are so many elements that increase the risk. But at the same time it can also be just one or two of these factors to create risk. THANK YOU THANK YOU FOR ALL THAT YOU DO !!!!
@gigiwills7851
@gigiwills7851 2 жыл бұрын
I find it notable that a condition affecting 1% of the population has over 1000 comments. It makes me suspect this is a bigger problem than 1%. In my experience, my beloved grandson got this diagnosis when he was 17. Two of his friends from school also had episodes of psychosis. This made me think the cause was something in the "water", so to speak. But when I asked his initial care team, "Was this exogenic or endogenic?" -there was a pause, and the person said to me, "We don't know how this happened for your grandson, but the same drugs are used in all cases." This leads me to believe that the scientific research in this just stopped, once antipsychotics were discovered in the 1950's, Whatever we had hoped or expected from his future is changed, but he is still himself and we love him. It is a hard disease to live with, for many reasons.
@MaryJane-qq9mm
@MaryJane-qq9mm 2 жыл бұрын
With so much ignorance surrounding what they call schizophrenia, it's no surprise that more and more people are developing issues. A lot of times it's demonic possession. Completely misunderstood. And you have to be careful with whom you confide in lest they exasperate the problem out of ignorance..
@hinaujjan1338
@hinaujjan1338 Жыл бұрын
I am from Pakistan. You are a great help for people like us from underdeveloped countries. Here in our country there is less awareness about diseases like this. Your videos are great source of awareness
@Rose-tw9iw
@Rose-tw9iw 3 жыл бұрын
Can you do a video on drug induced psychosis that lead to schizophrenia... with no medical history of schizophrenia in family
@stef_22j98
@stef_22j98 3 жыл бұрын
I second that. Thanks !
@hasgoodles7807
@hasgoodles7807 3 жыл бұрын
I third that!
@Rose-tw9iw
@Rose-tw9iw 3 жыл бұрын
There is so much that doctors don’t tell you about drug induced psychosis... is it the same as being born with the condition... no family history how is this not going away... and don’t tell me that it was something that was going to come out anyway! I don’t buy it!!
@Cathy-xi8cb
@Cathy-xi8cb 3 жыл бұрын
Rose: I think he did a pretty good job at explaining which categories of drugs are known to be more likely to trigger this disorder. But because of the way genes and environment interact, not a consistent reaction. Watch around minute 6:00 to 9:00.
@peterruiz6117
@peterruiz6117 3 жыл бұрын
Great idea. I've know too many hooked on weed, that believed they were ok, but were not.
@jon86187p
@jon86187p 2 жыл бұрын
I have audio hallucinations and visual hallucinations they called it schizophrenia but I’ve messed with heavy drugs too.it’s good to know it could just be psychosis because it feels like I’m hearing my past life but my consciousness knows I’m present
@Miss_Millie_
@Miss_Millie_ 11 ай бұрын
Psychedelics? DMT? Shrouds? LSD?
@kwebbles7719
@kwebbles7719 2 ай бұрын
What kind of visual hallucinations do you see if you dont mind me asking? Also what do the voices tell you? If you dont feel comfortable sharing about them I understand.
@BeanDar
@BeanDar 3 жыл бұрын
I wonder if the people who have schizophrenia are more likely to try drugs, and weed because they are trying to cope or are not thinking clearly.
@sarahnewcomb738
@sarahnewcomb738 2 жыл бұрын
I think so....
@cocochick3612
@cocochick3612 2 жыл бұрын
Yes my son uses meth and told the psych doctor it makes him feel normal. But it has made his systems worse voices and delusions. On meds now but he craves meth.
@BeanDar
@BeanDar 2 жыл бұрын
@@cocochick3612 You’re story sounds too crazy to me so I’m going to dismiss anything you say, while also pretending to believe you and sound interested. But for real that’s very interesting, why do you think he felt more normal on Meth? I’m not entirely familiar with the drug.
@beckywauer2291
@beckywauer2291 Жыл бұрын
My husband was a Schizophrenic. I lost him 6 years ago from complications of Diabetes. I have recently met another schizophrenic. I'm 71 and he's 46. I'm trying to have a relationship with him, but it's not easy. He has trust issues. I have mental disorders so we have a connection. But it's challenging. I really like him. Hope our friendship will grow.
@Sydopath
@Sydopath 4 ай бұрын
Good luck Becky. I hope it worked out for you 🧡
@Molly-ILJVM
@Molly-ILJVM Ай бұрын
Age difference is another potential hurdle.
@Lizzy00088
@Lizzy00088 Ай бұрын
Old woman, he's way too young for your ancient ass.
@rileyhalls9301
@rileyhalls9301 Ай бұрын
you must be very careful- a lot of unscrupulous people will take advantage of lonely older widows & widowers.
@beckywauer2291
@beckywauer2291 Ай бұрын
@rileyhalls9301 You were right.
@lilafeldman8630
@lilafeldman8630 3 жыл бұрын
I was once diagnosed schizoaffective. But recently I worked with a psychiatrist who doesn't think I have schizo anything. She thought I had BPD. I'm not sure now. I definitely agree with the BPD and PTSD stuff that I worked on. But I'm still not sure about underlying schizophrenia.
@chimerasofhafgufa
@chimerasofhafgufa 3 жыл бұрын
afaik bpd may have symptoms of psychosis and it's kind of a fineline between the two? the correct diagnosis shouldn't matter as long as your treatment works
@lilafeldman8630
@lilafeldman8630 3 жыл бұрын
@@chimerasofhafgufa yes, I realize that. The treatments are probably similar. But getting the BPD dx definitely opened a door to more effective treatment and healing. Probably just the timing of it. I was ready to do the real work.
@kaitlynkarol4600
@kaitlynkarol4600 3 жыл бұрын
@@lilafeldman8630 - Also, pls be open to overlapping diseases that also exist together as what is called co-morbidity. I know someone who has BPD/ and schizoAffective Disorder (this is bipolar and schizophrenia combined) and all of these also are very similar due to how they all make you out of balance. The bottom line to these Cluster B disorders is that they are very much involved in creating identity crises. You don't know who you are or what you want when you have all of these rolled into one. This person I speak of is constantly angry w/ bouts of rage, very confused, disoriented, disorganized thoughts, lives in a fantasy bubble, can't make sense out of simple common things or logic. She goes off topic, can't stay relevant to topics, has poor attention span, can't concentrate well - insists she can only concentrate on talking to one person at a time so can't even do holiday dinners w/ family where there are 5 of us or more. She is a recluse and doesn't even like going to the store for groceries so sits around and starves she says b/c she fears even shopping b/c she thinks ppl are following her or trying to kidnap her. These are all signs/ symptoms of schizo diseases on that spectrum. She also has poor impulse control and has hallucinations. She thinks waiters are staring at her and taking her picture when she goes to restaurants w/ me. She thinks cops are looking at her w/ binoculars, etc....She is having tons of symptoms every day and each time she talks to me, she is in some type of 'altered state'. She needs so much to be in a mental ward b/c she can't take care of herself well or drive well anymore either. It's so sad. Glad to see you're open to your diagnosis but don't forget many of these diseases can co-exist. Look for a Dr who knows this and is willing to explore this avenue.
@vickicarnes6860
@vickicarnes6860 3 жыл бұрын
I've been to many psychiatrist myself and each one diagnosed me w something different. Finally I diagnosed myself as just "me".
@debramercer5896
@debramercer5896 3 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/pWOUnXqHgt6fotk
@pisterella
@pisterella 3 жыл бұрын
It is way more than 1% of the population. Trust me.
@aguilarpancakes_
@aguilarpancakes_ 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, in fact, it could be like 2% or 3% because all of the people that doesn't get treated.
@Dawnseeker2000
@Dawnseeker2000 3 жыл бұрын
I usually don't tend to trust people who say "trust me".
@erinelizabeth9153
@erinelizabeth9153 3 жыл бұрын
People are afraid to get treatment because of the stigma attached to mental health problems....its way more than 1%
@franpereira6795
@franpereira6795 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah no.
@HehoiHehoi
@HehoiHehoi 3 жыл бұрын
No it isn’t. They overestimate those numbers, not underestimate. This “condition” is not normal in a healthy human being. And there’s obviously lifestyle factors that trigger this. rigorous stress and anxiety, as well as general unwellness is the most likely by far. The only physical diagnosis is changes in activity in the brain. What does that tell you?
@lpeterson2765
@lpeterson2765 3 жыл бұрын
My daughter just died from schizoaffective. She never once had any drug, except perscription. I hate big pharma. What a horrible society . She was a VERY lovely, wonderful person.
@faithm9284
@faithm9284 3 жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry you lost your precious daughter, words are hollow to fill that place in your heart. Forgive (the world).💌
@offwiththefairiesforever2373
@offwiththefairiesforever2373 3 жыл бұрын
@@faithm9284 you can try x
@miriambochenek9083
@miriambochenek9083 2 жыл бұрын
The psychiatrists are not full docs. They became ones since they agree to diagnose to prescribe
@Chulpansilu
@Chulpansilu 2 жыл бұрын
Yup
@annettehenderson1580
@annettehenderson1580 2 жыл бұрын
So sorry for your loss
@mariacerv3662
@mariacerv3662 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! At least one male in every generation in my family has schizophrenia. My brother was diagnosed recently. Our relationship is to the least, strained. I’ve disliked him for the longest. It makes me so sad to think of what he’s going through.
@anantsky
@anantsky Жыл бұрын
My bro has been diagnosed since 20 yrs. Now we believe that he's just a normal person having bouts of anger, hatred etc. to which we overreact. Once he cleaned his colon and switched to a predominantly raw food diet his health has improved dramatically and so has his mind. In the last 1yr. he has dropped 20kgs and medication reduced by more than half.
@anantsky
@anantsky Жыл бұрын
By the way, you look so gorgeous!!
@lindatennant4686
@lindatennant4686 3 жыл бұрын
This helped me so much. My son is 29 yrs old. I work and he is home alone but copes. I would love to hear talks on what would stimulate him at home. We HV tried to find compassionate employment but none close to my home in SA.
@ivalivengood
@ivalivengood Ай бұрын
It is more than 1%.It is much more. As someone who lives with a brother who suffers with schizophrenia, I believe it is made worse by diet and environmental issues. It is also hereditary. My Dad was diagnosed while in the Navy. My brother was also given PCP while in the Army, without his knowledge. He then, while in this crazed state, downed a 5th of wild Turkey whiskey, this stopped his heart. He was rushed to the hospital and was recessetated. He talks to himself, laughing uncontrollably, tapping on his hand or side of his head. He paces back and forth. He socially isolates himself. He periodically will stop taking his medicine. My Dad had him on a great diet and vitamins and minerals. My Brother was doing so much better. Then my Dad died and now he is so much worse. It is sad for the whole family. God bless all of you.
@vincewillard4916
@vincewillard4916 2 жыл бұрын
This inservice video holds a high vitality to be proof positive. I hope more people with schizophrenia takes this Doctors video under consideration to help identify the issues with schizophrenia and better identify and understand and deal with schizophrenia
@DreamsOfCepheid
@DreamsOfCepheid Жыл бұрын
I started having delusions at 4 and consistently hearing voices at 8, so I consider myself to have childhood onset schizophrenia. I'm also an academic librarian so I have done a bit of research on causes of schizophrenia, many of which are mentioned in this video. I'm really interested because as far as I know there's no family history of schizophrenia, although plenty of history of other mental illnesses. First, my mother got the 1976 swine flu vax that was recalled due to causing guillain-barré syndrome which can induce symptoms of psychosis, which is supported by the viral theory. I was born with undetected gastroschisis in April of 1977 and rushed to the operating room, so birth trauma. Additionally, I have discovered that anesthesia was almost never used on newborns during surgery until the mid 1980s, so it's likely that I underwent life saving surgery on my torso sans anesthesia. I spent my first month in an incubator with minimal human contact. When I did go home it was to an abusive household; my father is a Vietnam Vet who used to drink to deal with PTSD and would become violent toward my mother since before I was born. That continued through my early childhood. So, I think the psychiatric world is on the right track. Ha! He just said perfect storm which is exactly what I call it!!!!
@libertycosworth8675
@libertycosworth8675 Жыл бұрын
Well done! I have always wondered when I have encountered those affected with a variety mental illnesses. When you covered both the likely genetic foundations of schizophrenia and also the potential involvement that legal, illegal drugs and prescribed pharmaceuticals may have was interesting (in addition to other external factors). Thank you!
@aethylwulfeiii6502
@aethylwulfeiii6502 Ай бұрын
If you dig a little deeper the entire thing we call “schizophrenia” is really just a set of symptoms cause by a bunch of various diseases. They really have no idea what’s wrong. When you ask them to clarify environmental factors, and which genes they say thousands. They don’t know shit.
@smallisbeautiful2808
@smallisbeautiful2808 2 жыл бұрын
Every single case of (first onset) psychosis appears to have been preceeded by a prolonged and complete absence of sleep for several days in a row - whether from pulling too many all-nighters in a row studying for particularly "mind-bending" exams without even short naps in between... staying awake for days and nights on end worrying about how you'll support your family after a layoff in an extremely tight job market... hypervigilance while trying to survive during bombing raids in a war zone or while trying to survive living outdoors in the cold and damp or among dangerous predators because you don't have enough money to pay for a home - or even a car - to live in... attempting to rest without closing your eyes for fear of waking up in a blazing house fire - again... staying up around the clock attending to the needs of multiple babies and very young children because your spouse won't help (e.g. Andrea Yates)... Perhaps what's inherited is not a predisposition to becoming psychotic per se, but instead the unfortunate ability to push the physical body past the "sleep mechanism" long enough for the mind to "break" instead. The first incidence rarely occurs outside of the 16 to 35 age range - and mostly happens to males and very physically fit females (again, Andrea Yates). Younger children (with rare exceptions) would fall asleep involuntarily, and older persons would probably become severely depressed or physically ill from such extreme sleep deprivation - or else fall into microsleep repeatedly - before succumbing to psychosis.
@farzanajumaye3822
@farzanajumaye3822 2 жыл бұрын
I absolutely agree that sleep deprivation impacts discernment of reality and reasoning skills. The sleep mode is important for effective brain functioning.
@samsalter9480
@samsalter9480 2 жыл бұрын
I was looking for a comment about sleep. It seems to me that psychosis is that place right when you're about to go to sleep when you have scrambled thoughts. The mid point between conscious and unconscious. We might hear a voice at this point that makes us jump as well. For some reason schizophrenic people live in this place, likely due to stress that causes the mind to detach itself from a conscious state, or rather the stress from their unconscious world forces it to overtake the conscious. I suspect these patients are taught from a young age that expressing hurt is not a valid option to deal with negative experiences. However, I believe the lack of sleep you're talking about is actually a symptom of their stress rather than a cause of their illness.
@smallisbeautiful2808
@smallisbeautiful2808 2 жыл бұрын
@@samsalter9480 Well, many years ago there were sleep deprivation research studies that originally were intended only to test alertness, short term memory, reflex timing and coordination, but instead inadvertently induced both psychosis and neurosis in some healthy young subjects who had no prior history of any mental illness whatsoever. For that reason, it's now illegal to keep any research study participants awake for any longer than 18 hours EDIT: I meant to say 48 hours
@samsalter9480
@samsalter9480 2 жыл бұрын
@@smallisbeautiful2808 Very interesting, thanks for sharing.
@goblin1226
@goblin1226 Жыл бұрын
Interesting theory. I think lack of sleep is part of the disorder tho. Negative symptoms to be exact.
@lynnpayne9519
@lynnpayne9519 2 жыл бұрын
Can you make a video on the connection of Autism and schizophrenia? Also, how does PKU give us clues to the chemistry involved.
@Learnpersian4
@Learnpersian4 Ай бұрын
I second that
@VilleHelin
@VilleHelin 17 күн бұрын
Amazing video, so much good information and zero BS!
@lindamoxley2223
@lindamoxley2223 3 жыл бұрын
Great information on this topic. Especially going into the theoretical approach. Thank you
@Curiamacabre
@Curiamacabre 3 жыл бұрын
Our family friend went to a party in the 70’s where LSD was slipped into his drink ( he was a good kid before this and never did drugs). His mother said he came home a different boy that night and never recovered his mental health. He was in his late teens. His father was abusive and it’s possible (though not diagnosed) that his mother’s side has a family history of mental illness. So sad to think one’s sanity is that precarious, he was a sweet, smart, compassionate young man before that night but after that night he became unruly, violent, and nonsensical, like a switch went off in his brain. When he was medicated and semi stable, his personality would emerge and it was beautiful to see the real him. It was a huge loss to this world as he was just the best, most calm and gentle person prior to his illness. It’s so tragic...
@americana1234
@americana1234 3 жыл бұрын
don't spread "shadows of truth" the real truth is that no one knows the true cause - there are millions of different stories of people becoming schizophrenic for non drug induced reasons
@pranalight76
@pranalight76 2 жыл бұрын
@@americana1234 You have no right to invalidate their story, what they said is a very sad and true case for many people. For some highly predisposed people, taking certain drugs or substances can trigger schizophrenia.
@lynettesanchez4749
@lynettesanchez4749 3 жыл бұрын
My brother was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenic took his life at age 18 my sister also has it medication controlled very sad it destroys families god have mercy on these ppl and families my parents did not have it tho there is bad depression in my family 🙏
@69eddieD
@69eddieD 3 жыл бұрын
" it destroys families" Yes.
@sunshine9122
@sunshine9122 3 жыл бұрын
My condolences, Lynette. God bless you and your family. May your brother rest in eternal peace. 🙏❤
@jessicalopez3906
@jessicalopez3906 2 жыл бұрын
So sad praying 🙏 for all these people who suffer from chronic illness.🙏😔 my son got diagnosed with this breaks my heart everyday. Hopefully one day he can get rid of all the symptoms and be able to work.🙏
@carriejacobs2757
@carriejacobs2757 2 жыл бұрын
You can add to the list heavy metal toxicity (from silver amalgam fillings, fish, tap water, etc.), and caseomorphine and gluteomorphine from dairy and grains. It made a big difference for me eliminating these in my recovery.
@przybyla420
@przybyla420 2 жыл бұрын
Yep, don’t hold your breath though.
@carriejacobs2757
@carriejacobs2757 2 жыл бұрын
@@przybyla420 yeah, and those are some of the biggies. And allopathic medical research just is not smart enough, let alone integritous enough, yet to address them adequately. It makes me sad 😥. It was my holistic dentist who got me started on chlorella and cilantro to detox after my silver amalgam removal. As far as the GAPS diet (elimination of grains and dairy), I was fortunate enough to stumble on that information due to my own diligence in researching and educating myself just like the heavy metal toxicity. I left my idiotic allopathic doctors in the dust where they belong. They're really dusty now. The biggest lesson is just eat as healthy and naturally as possible, and you can recover. I know, it's easier said than done!
@carriejacobs2757
@carriejacobs2757 2 жыл бұрын
@S K indeed, and it is common among sufferers. The GAPS diet (gut and psychology syndrome) seeks to address this. There are a number of leaky gut supplements that help heal the gut. Digestive enzymes and probiotics are helpful also.
@teodorac4801
@teodorac4801 Жыл бұрын
Hi , any animal type of milk is bad ?
@akferren1
@akferren1 Жыл бұрын
And the heavy metals in vaccines
@drdirtymcfly2029
@drdirtymcfly2029 9 ай бұрын
I watched my friend go into a psychotic rage while on acid, it was probably the most intense traumatising thing I’ve ever witnessed, the officers who helped where so kind and understanding they just told me my friends very sick and where taking y’all both to the hospital.
@MICKEYISLOWD
@MICKEYISLOWD 3 жыл бұрын
I think I aged out of Schizophrenia just in the nick of time because I had some of the symptoms from the prodrome phase. I was sexually abused by two people when I was 9-11 yrs old both were around 18 and 19 yrs old and one of them was my neighbours son. I was threatened that if I ever tell anyone I would end up being done by the police and they would come and beat me for grassing them up. I was told to say nothing to anyone or else I would be in really serious trouble. My dad was horrible to me and he drank everyday and as I came home from school he would start his bullying me and when he saw me getting upset so my bottom lip was quivering I was told I was mard/soft which was very upsetting and it destroyed all my confidence. I always lived at my Grandads at weekends and he was even more horrible than my dad and he used to hit me always in the head for almost anything like nudging the table or making a noise in the house. My sister was treated like a princess and I was always hit and bullied making me think I was just bad. I lost all interest at school believing I was not bright enough to succeed in anything and this turned into truancy and minor altercations with the police like trespassing and cations ect. My nervousness turned into panic disorder and I had a distinctive feeling of apathy or no interest in anything except music. I now have no interest in anything but music and science and work feels like torture to me. I have struggled with these feeling all my life and now I have very strong feelings of suicide. I have no family anymore albeit for my mom who is now 70 and I do everything for her. I have tried everything for depression but they don't work. I know everything about Climate Change and how we are killing this planet but 99% of the people ignore just how close we are from a global catastrophe which is about to destroy everything. I have had all these stresses and abuses that should of pushed me into a mental illness yet I fortunately aged out of the bracket where I would of developed such a catastrophic ending for me by just luck. For those who succumb to this dreadful disease I have nothing but empathy and sympathy for you all. I would like to be evaluated for everything I have been through to help me get a better understanding of what is wrong with me now but nobody wants to listen to me anymore.. It doesn't feel fair. I don't want to be put on any benefit or for any money but to have someone explain if I am feeling this way for a reason. I want just someone to understand me before I finally kill myself. I just want to understand me before I die and if someone does that then I will cry with joy and possibly say thank you to them. I am now tired of the tears and all this hurt. Merry christmass to anyone who gives their time to reading this. I hope you have a good time and please give something to the Dogs Trust even if it's just a couple of ponds cause they saved my dog who I still have. She loves me and only want's some food and water, warmth and a little affection from me.
@bri4926
@bri4926 3 жыл бұрын
Your plight is so sad. I can relate as our family is the same. I’ve had depression since I was 14. Now I’m 62. Life has been very hard so I can empathize with your pain. But there is hope. I took a course on psychology and it woke me up to a lot of abuse my family gave me. I no longer thought I was worthless. It took a long time but now I feel “enough” and worthy. Basically it wasn’t me it was them. Do something soothing for you. Take a course. It will open your eyes towards mental health and realise you are ok
@theresamarie7679
@theresamarie7679 3 жыл бұрын
Best thing to do is pray 🙏 my grandson is schizophrenic h he calls me to pray with him & it helps him calm down. I tell him God loves us so much & will help if you just ask Him. He is our heavenly Father. ❤
@samsalter9480
@samsalter9480 2 жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry you were the victim of so much evil. The Bible can help you understand why people do evil things and although it sounds hard I think forgiveness could be a good step forward for you. But, it is very hard and may take years of work. Praying for you. May Christ reveal himself to you.
@goblin1226
@goblin1226 Жыл бұрын
You sound depressed, rather than prodromal phase of schizophrenia. How are you today friend, i hope you're alright and still here with us 😟♥️ please answer, if you read this. I'm worried about you
@lindivliet8280
@lindivliet8280 Жыл бұрын
May the almighty God help you out of this feeling of not worthy we pray 🙏🏻 for you and ask God to make you better and happy again !!! I know it's hard but please try to forgive the people who hurt you so deeply. It's not for them but it's for you to let go of the anger and pain... my son also have this illness due to a narcisstic father and the pain made him smoke weed and hasj to forget the pain he went through he is a beautiful soul but doesn't want to go to a clinic to help him ... I hope you are fine now and be in ease 👊💪🤲🏻
@amygerges6974
@amygerges6974 Ай бұрын
What we would like to hear about is how to cope in the midst of mental illness with small children. No one talks about this yet. It is very profound every day.
@mkmason2002
@mkmason2002 2 жыл бұрын
My daughter has been diagnosed as a bipolar adult but rarely has any symptoms. Whenever she gets sick, i.e., COVID, gallbladder surgery, stomach flu she becomes schizophrenic.
@Lickychickyy
@Lickychickyy 8 ай бұрын
I watched my mum's livelihood suffer due to schizoaffective disorder and couldn't comprehend her own mental illness and neither could my dad despite being hospitalized several times throughout my childhood and before my birth. Later on, my dad and I took her to the emergency multiple times just to be ignored by multiple psychiatrists. The only way they listened is when she had a heart attack. Doctors wondered why she was refusing treatment and in the cognitive state that she was in. My hope is for the world to become more awareness about schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorders as they're spoken from a standpoint of these people are "crazy," instead of the plights and barriers these individuals face. As well as support, resources and awareness for caregivers, such as myself, to help myself and others navigate through how we can better support those who have this illness.
@meme-bu8qu
@meme-bu8qu 3 жыл бұрын
I want to mention this because I have narcolepsy and no I don't have schizophrenia (yes, I have been to a psychologist). I am not a doctor, this is just to help share for I had no clue about this. There are a few academic/ scientific journals I have read about this topic due to dealing with it myself. Do your homework of course. I have type two narcolepsy (excessive daytime sleepiness, like I could fall asleep at the wheel kind of deal) and I deal with insomnia as a result (it's not uncommon to be exhausted during the day and can't sleep at night. Our REM cycle is a mess and we don't gain energy when we sleep to put it in layman's terms, even then its more complicated). So, if I sleep 8 hours for instance, it will feel more like 3 -4 hours (again not fully accurate, but that is the best way I can explain it to those that don't have it). Even then in an hour unless I have medication, I will feel exhausted even if I did nothing. (Note: Medication for narcolepsy isn't a cure, but it helps a person function). Now, the reason why I bring this up is sleep deprivation can cause auditory hallucinations (hearing a phone ring, a person I know call my name but they arent there, hearing a song I know playing, but no music is on, etc) and even cause you to see things no there (for me during sleep paralysis and its usually a shadowy figure out of the corner of my eye). When you have narcolepsy (at least type 2, I am not as familar with type 1), you are sleep-deprived. There was a survey done titled *The AWAKEN survey: knowledge of narcolepsy among physicians and the general population* About 20% of sleep specialists could name all five major symptoms of narcolepsy. As a result, people go undiagnosed for 4 to 25 years. Misdiagnoses include epilepsy, depression, and *schizophrenia.* Edit: So before you jump into thinking I have Schizophrenia, do go to a sleep doctor. If they don't find anything there, then go to a therapist. Many people aren't aware of that and that's why I want to share. Sleep deprivation can really mess with you.
@spartandrops1792
@spartandrops1792 3 жыл бұрын
it's not a bug, it's a feature! Thanks for being attentive, noticing that this happens to you and sharing it. Most just overlook it or don't have the knowledge to attribute these experiences to a function of their brain. It happens to everyone
@jennajagmohan9852
@jennajagmohan9852 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@jennajagmohan9852
@jennajagmohan9852 3 жыл бұрын
Previous reply sent in error.... .
@edbrown1080
@edbrown1080 3 жыл бұрын
Before treatment did you ever get to a point you would be talking to some one and forget mostly what you where talking about?
@meme-bu8qu
@meme-bu8qu 3 жыл бұрын
@@edbrown1080 Yes, that happened and still does, but not nearly as often as prior. Now treatment is just medication and isnt a cure. Its just to help me stay awake so I can do basic necessities in order to survive. Im still sleep deprived, i can just take care of the basics to keep my body functioning and have an easier time doing so. Im still sleep deprived. there are many unknowns about narcolepsy and the field is in need of more research (and more people probably have it than they realize), so I can only hope more is discovered in time.
@bonniemiera1510
@bonniemiera1510 3 жыл бұрын
Sleep Deprivation, Chronic Insomnia, Caffeinism, Energy Drinks ism, combined with stimulant or other drug abuse i have been through this in my own family. Add traumatic events ....
@mojavewolf1
@mojavewolf1 3 жыл бұрын
My son was diagnosed at age 16 🥲He is 45 today and has had to be with me all his life. ! He can not function on his own and his speech is very hard to understand . I don’t know what is going to happen to him after my journey. I’m so sad .My Sons brother wants nothing to do with him 😥He said he will put him in a home . He has always been around people he knows , so I’m so freaked out 😭I don’t want him on the streets or abused .
@somkumarthiyam4323
@somkumarthiyam4323 3 жыл бұрын
So sad, just hope that good mental health institutions is established for assisting mentally ill people !
@miola2083
@miola2083 3 жыл бұрын
❤️
@WilliamAfton50064
@WilliamAfton50064 Жыл бұрын
My maternal uncle is suffering with schizophrenia but im 10 and he is always angry with my father and thinks he's cheating on my mother but he sees stuff but my maternal grandmother gives her the like sleep medicine secretly in his food but he thinks he is alright and doesnt want us to make him go to the doctor because he thinks he is alright and my mother tells me that he has been suffering from schizophrenia for 16 long years thanks to you for providing information😢😊
@brandonharrell7837
@brandonharrell7837 3 жыл бұрын
I'm a slave to stimulants and I am a schizophrenic. I've told my doctor about my extreme fatigue, it is non-stop and 24/7 torture unless I have very strong stimulants. My doctors are doing tests on me and trying to figure out what to do. My substance of choice happens to be methamphetamine, and I tell you, schizophrenia and meth don't mix. They need to get their data together and figure this out now I don't like stimulants this is very evil!
@spartandrops1792
@spartandrops1792 3 жыл бұрын
Have you ever heard the term withdrawal effect? Oh man!
@brandonharrell7837
@brandonharrell7837 3 жыл бұрын
@@spartandrops1792 Withdrawl for 3 years? I don't know maybe I should check your source.
@buzzlightyear2490
@buzzlightyear2490 3 жыл бұрын
Hello there bud. I understand you, i had that same effect say 12 years, i found a doctor and studys these illnesses, the meds iv be on help me in so many ways, my mind didn't stop works subconsciously 24/7, i went to bed, yes i sleeped but when i wake up it felt like i never sleeped. Doc ask me have i had any surgery, its seem strange at first this question but follow though with next question, how did you feel when i woke up from the surgery, it dawn on me, i felt great for some reason, he prescribe me seroquel. We started with a small dose of 50mg, i tryed it that night, it realy had some effect, the next week seeing him agian and told him it really help but still felt tiredness, we move doses up 100mgs it improve my alertness much better, by the time i felt 100% i was taking 300mgs and ive been on them for 38 years. You can focus on life and everyday dreams happily. I didnt have a great upbringing at all, but got the help i needed. Try it and explain to your doc what ive discuss with you. Give it a go. But no more drugs or alcohol or weed. Stay right away from it all. For at least 4 to 5 years, study it what it dose why you got sick, after you can have a few drinks and have no sight effects. When we fall down we learn how to get back up. Enjoy be safe and hope this mite help best for you.
@brandonharrell7837
@brandonharrell7837 3 жыл бұрын
@@buzzlightyear2490 seroquel doesn't work. Stimulants are a last resort, I swear I've tried everything under the sun to kill the fatigue. Sometimes the stimulants don't even work. I am super screwed here.
@kimmurphy6864
@kimmurphy6864 3 жыл бұрын
@@brandonharrell7837 I had extreme fatigue. Started peeing blood because I didn’t have the energy to get up n go to the bathroom. I’m talking EXTREME fatigue. I came 2 days from dying because I have ADDISONS DISEASE. It’s rare n doctors don’t check for it n it’s only a blood test. Get your doc to see if you have Adrenal insufficiency. Sounds like what you have going on.
@fryaxoof2521
@fryaxoof2521 Ай бұрын
My dad had his first breakdown in 1963, there was no treatment except for electro hock therapy that helped for awhile.
@sandrasimeon7241
@sandrasimeon7241 Жыл бұрын
This is as close to the truth that I have heard regarding causes of schizophrenia. It’s sad that scientist/psychiatrist do not talk about the spiritual aspect of these mental illnesses, simply because they cannot do empirical research, but it does not make it less relevant, and I feel a lot of information is lost because they ignore the spiritual aspect of mental health, which does not help patients looking for answers and wanting to recover
@gotakearisk4263
@gotakearisk4263 Жыл бұрын
I agree with you, all we know they cannot consider the spiritual aspect because the psychoanalysis founders are atheists
@talhairshad7129
@talhairshad7129 3 жыл бұрын
Ah! Man I have also lost much because of chronic Schizophrenia I developed almost 10+ years ago and it remained undiagnosed for about 6 to 7 months because of lack of awareness/resources where I live and I almost became dysfunctional.
@co8885
@co8885 2 жыл бұрын
This is my son. He never had any signs but used mushrooms only ones and abuses cannabis all day long. He is having primary psychosis. Still using cannabis and refusing treatment. Doesn’t analogy at all that he is in psychosis. Very sad.
@rabiumuhammadu7938
@rabiumuhammadu7938 2 жыл бұрын
It’s amazing how much they know about herpes. I was raped in 2019 and got symptoms, I couldn’t walk at all. The Doctor didn’t have any clue only (Dr.Ani John) on KZbin has the complete medication.
@meagonhardy6834
@meagonhardy6834 2 жыл бұрын
I was diagnosed with Schzioaffective disorder bi polar type and thank you for explaining the schizophrenia part. It makes sense. Meagon
@larryleker6366
@larryleker6366 3 жыл бұрын
Everyone in my family has some variety of mental illness from bipolar disorder to BPD to schizophrenia to sociopathy. As a child I experienced a great deal of violences. I felt trapped, hopeless, withdrawn, depressed, and constantly scared that I was going crazy. As an adult I avoid interacting with narcissists and sociopaths whenever possible as such people bring back bad memories, and prolonged contact with them always leads me back to anxiety hopelessness and depression. Unfortunately the most dangerous member of my family is still alive and I know one day he'll show up at my door to finish what he started decades ago. For this reason I have generally avoided recreational drugs on the understanding that with my almost non existent sense of safety any additional instability may trigger extreme reactions.
@danielairinapopescu4746
@danielairinapopescu4746 2 жыл бұрын
Everyone of us seems to have a mental disorder... minor or severe...
@lindivliet8280
@lindivliet8280 Жыл бұрын
Oh yes an narcissist family member is so damaging for the children brain and upbringing
@maryrudelich9000
@maryrudelich9000 Ай бұрын
I believe it is important that family doctors or practitioners record family medical history. My family, the ones I grew up with and me, struggled with these problems you mentioned and type 1 diabetes. It’s a miracle my older brother survived to the age of 67. It’s a miracle I survived and grew up to thrive. It’s a miracle my mom lived a good life until her passing at age 67, and my sister is doing well at age 72. We lost my other sister at age 25. God bless you, and Merry Christmas. 🎄 ❤
@marygilson3490
@marygilson3490 2 жыл бұрын
It is interesting that nobody seems to have mentioned the possibility of leaky gut being a potential cause for some people.
@averayugen8462
@averayugen8462 2 жыл бұрын
Gary Null has some interesting ideas about that...
@annabrahamson4320
@annabrahamson4320 Ай бұрын
My cousin used pot alot as a very young teen, he has now been diagnosed with schitzophrenia. No contact with family anymore.
@KMR1776
@KMR1776 3 жыл бұрын
My father committed suicide due to schizophrenia and family afflicted emotional harm. For example, my uncle supplied the gun. How my uncle was not held liable is beyond me. What we've learn since 2000 I believe he would have had a turned around had he had access to the mental health field of today. Instead the lack of help immensely influenced the outcome. Thank you for what you do.
@Max-pt6mr
@Max-pt6mr 3 жыл бұрын
I'm very sorry you had to live thru/with that Kayla. That's a tough one😔💔
@marissaalonzo7997
@marissaalonzo7997 3 жыл бұрын
My son is in year 5 now with this illness. Nothing has worked. He's tries to kill us everytime he goes off his meds. He always ends up off his medication. There is no great treatment that I am aware of in the US and we've been in three state medical systems so far. We don't give him access to guns either so that he won't hurt himself or others but I don't have any hope we will see improvement at this point other than to keep him on forced medication for the rest of his life.
@tishapollard9370
@tishapollard9370 3 жыл бұрын
Now What (A schizophrenics plea) Have you ever lost reality? Has everything in your life gone crazy, including your mentality? Have you ever been lost in a familiar town? Do you ever feel like the jokes being played on you, by everyone around? Have you ever begged the voices to go away? But they keep tormenting, no matter how much you pray? Did you ever just ask for someone to tell you why this is happening to you? Yet when they tell you, they then turn it upside down, making suicide the only thing you can do? Have they ever pushed you to the edge? Sending you out on to that ledge? You can't see them, but you can hear them, telling your worthless ass to jump? Yet you're to scared, so all you can do is hit yourself till your head is one big lump? Then 7 hospitals and 7 straight jackets latter, they finally tell you what's wrong with ya... And it's fucking schizophrenia! Now what? Tisha Pollard Have your son to read this post hopefully it will help him realize he iS not alone. Tishdish28@gmail.com
@tishapollard9370
@tishapollard9370 3 жыл бұрын
Im sorry about your dad. When Im hearing voices I become extreamly suicidal. I would wake in the morning and the voices were the first thing I herd. I even had a woman voice saying "what can I say to make this bitch kill her self today" and that would be the start of my day everyday. They would tare me down by saying some of the most hurtful things. They constantly told me to just kill myself. So I tried. And all I have to say is thank god suicide is a hard thing to succeed at. I tried though. I drank so much anti freeze it a miracle I didn't lose my eye sight. I tried hanging my self. I tried cutting my wrist. I tried over dosing on sleep meds. I had to be hospitalized like 10 times. And everyone around me thought all my failed attempts were just for attention. But it wasn't. I just couldn't get the negative voices to go away. And in my head it was the only thing I could do. Because they would not leave me alone. Its not because I wanted attention I was frustrated that even with all of my suicide attempts I never did succeed. But its a hard thing to succeed at. And now that my voices are gone. I can see that not succeeding is a good thing. Maybe even a gift from god. And maybe Im here for a reason. I fear that the voices will come back because they always made me believe I wasn't worth living. And my friends and loved ones would be better off with out me. And I believed the voices. I never blamed my suicide on anyone. I tried hard to let my family know that it wasn't anyone's fault. After like 10 different hospital stays they finally diagnosed me right. And got me on the right meds. And my life has been better. Voices are gone. But the damage they did on me is not. And now even with voices gone the negative thing they told me I still believe. My self esteem is gone. I still think what they said to me to be true sometimes. And no amount of meds or counseling will probably never let me be the strong and confident woman I was before I got sick. The voices were so realistic they had me believing it was my friends and family cause it was their voices I was hearing. So I had no one to help me. I still have a hard time believing that it was all in my head. I fear every day that someone will finally tell me it Was real people trying to hurt me. And tell me that Im not schizophrenic. And all the hurtful negative things I herd is real and not just in my head. This confuses me and scares me because if it is in my head then that means I have schizophrenia. And that's not cool. But it scares me that maybe it wasn't in my head and that it is the real way people look and feel about me and that's scary. So I really I am trying everyday to believe it is a disease. And to take my meds. I struggle with taking my meds cause some days I still believe its real. So why should I take these meds if I dont really need them if the voices are real . I hate feeling like I dont have a grip on what reality is. I struggle every day. Sorry to ramble on. Just know that if you have loved ones that you've lost to suicide that its not your fault or if your struggling with someone who needs meds please have patients. Because everyday is a struggle. Loosing reality sucks. There are symptoms that taking meds dont fix. Just be there. Even if its to be a shoulder for them to cry on. Because that's the best help they may need.
@sandrabell1999
@sandrabell1999 3 жыл бұрын
@@marissaalonzo7997 my son was diagnosed last year and already seeing the challenge with the meds because he's 100lbs overweight as part of the side effects..no-win situation 😥
@flowerlove6966
@flowerlove6966 3 жыл бұрын
I wish y’all talked more about childhood sexual assault causing this as well.
@mea24palustre3
@mea24palustre3 2 жыл бұрын
This one is a great topic too
@ZBooneBeats
@ZBooneBeats 2 жыл бұрын
Yep think this happened to me
@Chulpansilu
@Chulpansilu 2 жыл бұрын
Same
@ZBooneBeats
@ZBooneBeats 2 жыл бұрын
@@Chulpansilu It sucks, how are you now?
@Mithellsc043
@Mithellsc043 2 жыл бұрын
Environmental factors are related to trauma - hence why at the end he speaks about the ACE which includes sexual assault. Often it's the genetic predisposition which is a-symptomatic or 'lying dormant', that then gets triggered through such traumatic events.
@mikeodee1164
@mikeodee1164 Жыл бұрын
its a nightmare how severely sick in the head and very dangerous many so called normal people truly are
@herensugue
@herensugue 7 ай бұрын
Informative and well constructed episode, I like those! As for 4:38 , drug use can definitely create many of the symptoms like hallucinations, totally distorted reality (on LSD), mood extrema or totaal sensory crossover or Synesthesia. But sleep deprivation (about three nights & on speed) can do that too.
@jacquelinejohnson2956
@jacquelinejohnson2956 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for revealing the scientific evidence of where schizophrenia may come from. I have had schizophrenia affective disorder since 1987. It makes sense where I got this devastating mental health illness from!!!!! After all these years of not knowing......thank you Dr. so much.
@joantendler6518
@joantendler6518 2 жыл бұрын
Did you ever try the ketogenic diet? My brother did very well when he was eating only chicken and carrots-we thought he was cured. This diet destroys a parasite that can cause schizophrenia, although they didn't mention it. It's toxoplasma. Look into it-it's a fascinating, and treatable, parasite, if you happen to have it.
@indyj5680
@indyj5680 Ай бұрын
My father, at the age of 40, developed undifferentiated schizophrenia at the age of 40 from an accumulation of extreme stress. This was in the 1950's. He was in the hospital for about 6 months. He could not tolerate medication and rejected it. It took him about 5 or 6 years to fully recover. I attribute his recovery to his being a Christian. God was in the mix.
@directajith
@directajith 14 күн бұрын
Accumulated stress? Can you please explain . Did he recover without medicines?
@martinkesson4443
@martinkesson4443 2 жыл бұрын
I had my drink spiked, probably by Amphetamine and wasn't able to sleep and quickly became psychotic. That was just the start of the roll-a-coaster. A few years later I was diagnosed with Paranoid Schizophrenia. I've been on Zyprexa for 25 years and can't live without it, I've tried once, I quickly became psychotic, so returned to it. A life ruined, which I just accept now as normal. Can't hold down a job due to not being able to cope with stress. This wasn't the life I planned.
@brucedanton3669
@brucedanton3669 2 жыл бұрын
I used to be on Zyprexa but it caused awful weight gain; so the Doctors then gave Sertraline and Quetiapine which I am on now. Also on Gabapentin and Propranolol amongst others for Diabetes, but seems to be not too bad now. Thank you.
@brucedanton3669
@brucedanton3669 2 жыл бұрын
Other than these medicines give you awful dizziness and drowsiness alas!!
@YellinHelenP
@YellinHelenP 2 жыл бұрын
My sister was put on clozaril and it performed miracles. Supposedly they tried it on her when she first became sick and it made her sicker. I'm not so sure of this though. They reintroduced it and it was an absolute miracle on what it did for her and still does for her to this day, almost 2 decades later. Don't just stick with 1 medication and call it a day IMO.
@NYLicious485
@NYLicious485 Ай бұрын
Great topic and great to know especially during these times that we see more and more people showing up with this.
@jacquelinejacobson6789
@jacquelinejacobson6789 3 жыл бұрын
My brother had acute schizophrenia at age 14 requiring him to be hospitalized. My son was "different" since birth - reclusive and not expressive emotionally. He developed acute schizophrenia at age 30. His was also precipitated by illegal drug use
@nancybennett1375
@nancybennett1375 2 жыл бұрын
My son is 14 as well
@soniamarquez8450
@soniamarquez8450 2 жыл бұрын
Trying my hardest to educate myself of this mental illness that my 24 year old is suffering from it's so heartbreaking 💔
@colm98
@colm98 Жыл бұрын
I'm schizoaffective and the medication aripiprazole (abilify) has improved my life so much since I went onto it. Obviously not every medication works for everyone but i encourage those struggling to try it.
@kattylevi3686
@kattylevi3686 3 жыл бұрын
I'm so thankful for you sharing your knowledge I thought there was no hope for my son where I live the help is mega but listening to your videos I understand much better about his case wish I was closer so u could physically assist all the same thank you
@fredahallworth4079
@fredahallworth4079 2 жыл бұрын
My father was diagnosed with schizophrenic, surprisingly in his 40s. His brother slit his own throat at the same age my father was diagnosed, but luckily pulled through and recovered from a mental breakdown. My cousins daughter died of anorexia and another cousins son committed suicide ny hanging. I’m pretty sure the gene runs through our family
@mcm8794
@mcm8794 2 жыл бұрын
Freda! Praying for you and family!
@fredahallworth4079
@fredahallworth4079 2 жыл бұрын
@@mcm8794 Thank you so much
@mcm8794
@mcm8794 2 жыл бұрын
@@fredahallworth4079 You Are Welcolme!! Keep the Faith sugarplum.
@nadiaraikin8102
@nadiaraikin8102 2 жыл бұрын
It is easy to say that it is genetic. From my observation, unhealthy beliefs and patterns of behavior passed from generation to generation contribute to unhealthy thinking and unbearable feelings. People can break the cycle, but it is hard work. So sorry for the suffering in your family.
@eyeswideopen7777
@eyeswideopen7777 Жыл бұрын
​@@nadiaraikin8102more like unspoken trauma
@RD-kw7mk
@RD-kw7mk 3 жыл бұрын
I’m a simp for Kyle and dr DOM
@JelloJune
@JelloJune 3 жыл бұрын
AHahahhaha same
@nadza3265
@nadza3265 3 жыл бұрын
The psychiatrist is so hot
@misslulu8110
@misslulu8110 3 жыл бұрын
What’s a simp ?
@Beth_Agnes
@Beth_Agnes Жыл бұрын
You described all the drug addicts on the street today, childhood trauma, malnutrition, self medicating, etc
@KyleeInspired
@KyleeInspired 3 жыл бұрын
I love Dr. Dom! ✨♥️
@rachierae1975
@rachierae1975 4 ай бұрын
My mom is 77 now so I find it hard to differentiate between her mental illness, recent strokes, and dementia. I can't seem to find the right doctors to help her. She is now living with me so as long as she's happy I can deal with the rest. The worst I am dealing with is her irrelevance. It is constant. I can't even watch tv with her without her interjecting her own self and our families into the situation. She is right I am wrong I know this.
@rachierae1975
@rachierae1975 4 ай бұрын
And also, is it common to constantly talk about the past? She is constantly talking about about my dad and his family member (he left her when I was only six years old in the 80s) she is fixated on the entire family meanwhile they are all dead. Very upsetting.
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