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I
reread a book recently that was published in 1908 in
German by Eugen Bleuler. The title of the book is
Dementia Praecox. Bleuler coined the term
schizophrenia. This book was not translated from
German to English until 1950 and it was an epic
volume on classifying this condition. It is as
reciteful as the DSM codes. It is important to be
aware of the monumental struggles that the earlier
contributors made in their efforts to understand
this very difficult human process, we now call
schizophrenia. I think that it is very important for
us to be aware of the history of the field in order
to understand why we are, where we are at, today. We
should be aware that some of Freud’s earliest
followers began treating schizophrenia with a more
active psychotherapy. This includes Sandor Ferenczi,
Gustav Bychowski, Karl Abraham, Franz Alexander and
others. In those early days the work was creative
and exciting. Freud himself did not like this
condition we call schizophrenia and made an effort
to avoid treating it even though in fact he did, but
he called it another condition.
When I began my career as a trainee learning Direct
Analysis under the guidance and supervision of John
N. Rosen, M.D., I felt a great sense of excitement
being allowed the privilege of working with patients
diagnosed with schizophrenia. That was prior to the
introduction of the medications. We worked without
any medication and because we believed that patients
could recover, we poured our energies and our hopes
into the treatment process and people did make
behavioral changes that allowed them to function
outside of institutions. This was not far from the
works of Harry Stack Sullivan and his theories of
interpersonal relations. Though Rosen was
theoretically much more Freudian than Sullivanian, I
began to utilize some of the direct methods of
psychotherapy with some of the ideas of Harry Stack
Sullivan. This happened to me intuitively. It became
apparent later on that there was no other direction
to take for me at that time. However, even that
changed over the years. This was also around the
time of Frieda Fromm Reichmann, Bertram Lewin, Carl
Whittaker, Thomas Malone, Sylvano Arieti, Otto Wills
Jr. and Harold Searles. All these individuals were
students of Fromm Reichmann and they made
significant contributions to the understanding of
psychotherapy with this population we call
schizophrenic. There was the Palo Alto study with
the distinguished anthropologist, Gregory Batson.
Don Jackson, Jay Haley and a number of other
contributors who were part of this study. These
individuals did much to further the understanding of
treatment with schizophrenia. People did change and
recover from this condition. In Europe, there was
Eugen Bleuler, Paul Federn, Gertrude Schwing,
Manfred Bleuler, the son of Eugene Bleuler, Gaetano
Benedetti, Christian Muller, Endre Uglestad and a
host of other creative individuals who pushed the
frontiers of knowledge further. It is a fallacy to
think that work of any substance only began after
the introduction of the medication.
There was much going on in the field but, there was
the split between the biological and the
psychological, that still exists today.
Unfortunately, there doesn’t seem to be a
significant rapprochement between the two entities.
I recall vividly, my early experience working with
the most regressed patients who responded to my
enthusiasm and the efforts and enthusiasm of my
colleagues. Certainly our work was not isolated.
There was a growing trend amongst many professionals
on an international level to share their experiences
by their writings and also the meetings they
attended. People shared there work and their ideas
and there was a sense of growing hope that treatment
was developing in a very positive way.
When the medications came out that did indeed turn
some people away from furthering the understanding
of how relationships between therapists and patients
make the difference in the outcome of treatment.
There was some research done by an English
researcher by the name of Phillip May. His research
was biased however, it pushed people away from
psychotherapy with schizophrenia. I think that it’s
imperative for us to understand that even though
medication has a place in the treatment of this
unfortunate condition, medication is developed and
sold by pharmaceutical companies who gain a
tremendous revenue from ‘pushing medication’. There
is a place for medication, I am not opposed to it,
but it is only one treatment method amongst many
other important methods that should be integrated.
Such as psychotherapy, and psychosocial
rehabilitation. Psychotherapy is and can be
successful. Psychosocial rehabilitation is and can
be successful. However, both methods are not widely
used enough and medication can be more successful,
if it is integrated in the other treatment efforts.
I must tell you that it took a considerable amount
of time for me to appreciate the limited value that
medication has because I saw what could happen with
professionals who dedicated their efforts at helping
the victims of schizophrenia even without
medication. However, I began to realize after some
time, that it is foolish to reject any useful
treatment tool. I have worked with this population
for 46 years. After years of effort, I began to
understand enough of the process to be able to train
and teach, in countries besides the United States. I
saw the devastation wrought by professionals who
didn’t care enough to put their best efforts into
the treatment process and also who were untrained
and basically not equipped to work with these
individuals.
Attitude in reference to treatment is a very
important part of the treatment process. Do you
really want to treat this problem? Is it important
to treat this problem? Because the person you are
treating who has been long abandoned by the
profession, deserves the best possible help that we
can give them, which I believe they are not getting.
I think that we can refer to the December 1999
report by the Surgeon General of the United States,
which declares with emphasis how poorly organized
current methods are and how many people with
schizophrenia are denied proper care. Treatment has
failed to answer the needs of the serious mentally
ill. Has it failed because patients who have a long
history of this condition can’t be helped? Or is it
because we don’t want to work with them? It is
acceptable if you don’t want to treat them, but at
least make that clear. Don’t say it can’t be done
because you don’t want to do it or you can’t do it.
That’s completely unfair.
What we do determines the future of these human
beings. They are not second class citizens they are
just as good as anyone else despite their illness.
All the symptoms and the frightening ideas that they
have, may frighten people away from treatment and
persuade them to say untrue things about that person
with schizophrenia. That is not right.
As far as medication is concerned, I am opposed to
the over utilization of it. I am opposed to
medication being the center of treatment. It has
become that, in the treatment world with some
exceptions. I believe that it is very important to
understand that schizophrenia is not primarily a
medical condition and should not be seen as that, if
we are to improve the results of treatment. There
are some good people in the field however, but many
are overwhelmed by those people who are looking for
better medications. There is much research with
respect to medication however, finding one that has
better therapeutic value than some of the current
medications is like looking for a needle in a
haystack. Even if they find it, these human beings
would still need other forms of treatment such as
psychotherapy to help them understand, what
happened, what it means and some understanding
whether or not it has to happen again. So when we
look at how medication is utilized in many
institutional settings we wonder whether or not it’s
for the patient or for the staff, because you often
see offerings of medication that is beyond reason.
If you look at medication and you come to some
conclusion as to what is it’s purpose, if it is
assumed that it will overcome that condition we call
schizophrenia it is a fallacy, it can not do that.
When you look at patients in institutional settings
you see them with the symptoms and characteristics
of schizophrenia however, they are modified by
medication, which very often deprives them of the
energies they require to go further in other forms
of treatment. There are many reports that state when
you reduce medication and you include other
treatment efforts, then the effects of medication
are more positive. So it is quite clear that there
is a place for medication but it should not be the
core of treatment. What we miss sorely are training
centers that will help direct interested students
and professionals into the area of treatment with
this population. The universities do not provide
that in their curriculum.
When we think of psychotherapy, what is the first
step in treatment? Contacting that individual with
that condition is imperative. Even the most
regressed person can be contacted in a way which
leads to a treatment relationship, if you are aware
of its importance. These people can be reached, they
are not beyond hope, there are chances for them to
recover to some degree or another, depending on the
consistency and the effectiveness of treatment.
There are chances for them to recover to some degree
at least, if the treatment is adjusted to fit their
personal needs.
In my experience in other countries, like Russia, I
was able to reach patients through an interpreter
because I wasn’t overly concerned about language and
cultural barriers. There are barriers that are much
more difficult than that, they are our own feelings
and our own fears and our own unwillingness to
contribute and participate and be involved in this
process with the patients that we treat. To quote
Freida Fromm Reichmann who many years ago said,
‘treatment with these individuals is a shared
experience’ it’s between two people, not you the
therapist, just standing aside and reflecting back
to the patient what you think they feel.
Making contact with this patient that has some
substance to it, is the first step. If you don’t
make the first step, if you don’t make contact with
these people for treatment, there is no second step.
The first step has to prepare the patient, whether
it happens quickly or not. You just don’t sit down
with an individual and expect them to be open to
treatment without the necessary preparation. There
isn’t any relationship in the beginning of
treatment. There has to be some relatedness between
you and that person because that person has been
through many therapists and has been disappointed by
their lack of success and they feel like failures
and are ashamed of their condition. Contact
necessarily must lead to a therapeutic alliance,
which is the context wherein all treatment takes
place.
Until we meet again,
Jack Rosberg
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