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Perpetuating Schzophrenia's Stigma [NYTimes.com]

A few months ago, a patient came to our hospital, seeking help. One of us, Edward, was on the team that treated him. He was pleasant, if slightly withdrawn, and cogent. He was a college graduate in his 20s and had recently been fired from his job as a high school math teacher, because of unexpected absences. He had come to believe that government agents were conspiring against him, and he had taken to living out of a truck and sleeping in different parking lots. By the time he came to us, he was exhausted. A diagnosis became clear: he had schizophrenia. 

 

We admitted him to the hospital, and after a few days, with his symptoms under control, we released him. Unfortunately, we prescribed a medication for him that could cause significant, permanent harm, instead of an equally effective drug with milder side effects - all because he was uninsured. 

 

[Photo by Mike/Flickr]

[For more of this story, written by Edward Larkin and Irene Hurford, go to http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08...span-region&_r=1]

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