Pacientes produtores ativos de saúde (prosumo)

Essa avalanche de informações e conhecimento relacionada à saúde e despejada todos os dias sobre os indivíduos sem a menor cerimônia varia muito em termos de objetividade e credibilidade. Porém, é preciso admitir que ela consegue atrair cada vez mais a atenção pública para assuntos de saúde - e muda o relacionamento tradicional entre médicos e pacientes, encorajando os últimos a exercer uma atitude mais participativa na relação. Ironicamente, enquanto os pacientes conquistam mais acesso às informações sobre saúde, os médicos têm cada vez menos tempo para estudar as últimas descobertas científicas ou para ler publicações da área - on-line ou não -, e mesmo para se comunicar adequadamente com especialistas de áreas relevantes e/ou com os próprios pacientes. Além disso, enquanto os médicos precisam dominar conhecimentos sobre as diferentes condições de saúde de um grande número de pacientes cujos rostos eles mal conseguem lembrar, um paciente instruído, com acesso à internet, pode, na verdade, ter lido uma pesquisa mais recente do que o médico sobre sua doença específica. Os pacientes chegam ao consultório com paginas impressas contendo o material que pesquisaram na internet, fotocópias de artigos da Physician's Desk Reference, ou recorte de outras revistas e anuários médicos. Eles fazem perguntas e não ficam mais reverenciando a figura do médico, com seu imaculado avental branco. Aqui as mudanças no relacionamento com os fundamentos profundos do tempo e conhecimento alteraram completamente a realidade médica. Livro: Riqueza Revolucionária - O significado da riqueza no futuro

Aviso!

Aviso! A maioria das drogas psiquiátricas pode causar reações de abstinência, incluindo reações emocionais e físicas com risco de vida. Portanto, não é apenas perigoso iniciar drogas psiquiátricas, também pode ser perigoso pará-las. Retirada de drogas psiquiátricas deve ser feita cuidadosamente sob supervisão clínica experiente. [Se possível] Os métodos para retirar-se com segurança das drogas psiquiátricas são discutidos no livro do Dr. Breggin: A abstinência de drogas psiquiátricas: um guia para prescritores, terapeutas, pacientes e suas famílias. Observação: Esse site pode aumentar bastante as chances do seu psiquiatra biológico piorar o seu prognóstico, sua família recorrer a internação psiquiátrica e serem prescritas injeções de depósito (duração maior). É mais indicado descontinuar drogas psicoativas com apoio da família e psiquiatra biológico ou pelo menos consentir a ingestão de cápsulas para não aumentar o custo do tratamento desnecessariamente. Observação 2: Esse blogue pode alimentar esperanças de que os familiares ou psiquiatras biológicos podem mudar e começar a ouvir os pacientes e se relacionarem de igual para igual e racionalmente. A mudança de familiares e psiquiatras biológicos é uma tarefa ingrata e provavelmente impossível. https://breggin.com/the-reform-work-of-peter-gotzsche-md/

segunda-feira, 5 de setembro de 2016

In Some Cultures People with Schizophrenia Actually Like the Voices They Hear

https://braindecoder.com/post/voice-hearing-experience-in-schizophrenia-may-vary-from-one-culture-to-1381850145?utm_source=facebook

In Some Cultures People with Schizophrenia Actually Like the Voices They Hear

Author: Agata Blaszczak Boxe

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Hearing voices of non-existent interlocutors is a common symptom of schizophrenia. But it seems that the voice-hearing experience among people with the disorder may vary depending on where they are from, according to a new study.
In the study, published recently in Topics in Cognitive Science, researchers looked at how people with schizophrenia from three different societies experienced hearing voices. They found that people from the US tended to describe the voices as intrusive unreal thoughts they hated. In contrast, people from South India were more likely to describe them as providing useful guidance, and people from Ghana were more likely to think of them as morally good.
"I was actually surprised that they were so different," study author Tanya M. Luhrmann of Stanford University told Braindecoder.
While exact brain mechanisms of voice hearing in schizophrenia are not clear, previous research has found that, during such auditory hallucinations, people with the disorder show increased flow to Broca's area in the brain, which is involved in speech production.
To see whether cultural differences can affect the content of these auditory hallucinations, Lurmann and her colleagues looked at 20 patients with schizophrenia in San Mateo, California, 20 patients in Chennai, South India, and 20 patients in Accra, Ghana. The researchers asked the participants how many voices they heard and how often, as well as whether they had experienced hallucinations with any other sensory elements. They also asked them what relationship they had with the voices and what the qualities of the voices were, among other questions.
They found that voices the Americans heard were often violent. "The screaming, fighting ... [they say] jump in front of the train," one US participant said. They tended to describe their voice-hearing experience as a war: "The warfare of everyone just yelling," another American patient said.
Although some of the people from India and Ghana also experienced violent voices, fewer of them reported violence and gave it less prominence in the interviews.
It was also very clear to the researchers that people from the US did not like the voices they heard. "Not one person told us that their predominant experience was positive," the researchers said. The Americans tended to describe the experience of hearing voices as a sign of insanity and they felt assaulted by them.
But in Ghana, half of the participants said that they mostly heard good voices that were actually helpful. "They just tell me to do the right thing. If I hadn't had these voices, I would have been dead long ago," one of them said.
"I was really struck by how insistent the subjects in Accra were that they had positive experiences," Luhrmann said.
In the group from South India, more than half of the people heard the voices of their family members like their parents, parents-in-law and siblings. While some of the voices were bad, others were good. For example, one man heard the voices of his sisters telling him off, but he also experienced voices of his ancestors who expressed their support of him and were his companions. "I like them," he said. He described them as useful, as they reminded him to take his bath, brush his teeth and drink his coffee.
At least eight people from the South Indian group said the voices were a positive experience. "I have a companion to talk (laughs). I need not go out and speak. I can talk within myself," one person said. The voices tended to provide guidance on everyday tasks to people, telling them to cook, clean and eat. They also told them not to smoke and drink.
The researchers think these differences in the voice-hearing experience stem from different cultural expectations about the mind and people. For example, unlike people in the other two countries, Americans tend to perceive the mind as a separate, private place. The voices upset them because they violate their sense of personal control, the researchers said.
Along the same lines, society in Chennai is "a world of kin in which seniors are presumed to know what juniors should be thinking and in which seniors are expected to give juniors advice," the researchers said. It may therefore explain why people in the South Indian group experienced the voices as those of their kin so frequently.
Such local cultural expectations about minds, people and spirits, coupled with culturally driven patterns of attention to auditory phenomena seem to actually to shape the voices that people with the condition hear, the researchers said.
"We think that, as people pay attention in culturally varied ways, there are small but important cognitive biases in the way that they identify, respond to, and remember auditory experiences," they said.

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