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You can't spell schizophrenia without an ‘ I ’: how does the E arly I ntervention in P sychosis approach relate to the concept of schizophrenia as an ipseity disturbance?
Author(s) -
Akroyd Michael John
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
early intervention in psychiatry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.087
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1751-7893
pISSN - 1751-7885
DOI - 10.1111/eip.12046
Subject(s) - prodrome , schizophrenia (object oriented programming) , psychology , psychosis , intervention (counseling) , disturbance (geology) , psychiatry , psychological intervention , diagnosis of schizophrenia , blame , delusion , clinical psychology , paleontology , biology
Background and Aim Operational approaches to psychiatric diagnosis have increased reliability, but the cost has been the reduction of diagnostic concepts to tick‐box lists of objective symptoms. Some blame this for growing disillusionment among younger clinicians in mental health. A renewed emphasis on the human subject and subjective experience could be one way to remedy this. While true for psychiatry in general, it is particularly true in psychiatry's ‘sacred symbol’ of psychiatry, schizophrenia. Greater understanding of schizophrenia will be of most relevance to those who have yet to develop the disorder, such as those targeted by E arly I ntervention in P sychosis services. A promising direction in the understanding of schizophrenia is the notion of fundamental disturbance in the sense of self (‘ipseity disturbance’). Method I intend to examine the relationship between the concept of schizophrenia as an ipseity disturbance and the E arly I ntervention in P sychosis service model through consideration of three main areas: symptoms of schizophrenia as understood by the ipseity disturbance concept; implications of the ipseity disturbance concept for the notion of a schizophrenia prodrome; and the ways in which the E arly I ntervention in P sychosis service model reflects or could be informed by the ipseity disturbance concept. Results and Conclusions I argue that explicit consideration of schizophrenia as an ipseity disturbance could lead to better identification of those at highest risk, and more appropriately tailored interventions.