Very astute comments.
i think depending on the circumstances, 'remission' and 'recovery' are interchangeable. but a different set they couldn't properly be
.
I thought "recovery" is supposed to be the life-long state people get into where they struggle to be well and are happy to not have been in the hospital in the last x number of months. But "recovered" would be like remission in cancer - NO SYMPTOMS - no need for the psychiatric medications. I would THINK that "remission" in bipolar and schizophrenia is like "recovered" but I also saw in some NAMI literature it was used like "residual" or something because they still talk about impairment. The question is "what is the impairment?" Is it something that can never be gotten back, like having a leg cut off in cancer? Only in this case, it is like brain damage - lowering the person's IQ? OR, is it residual symptoms of what they called "schizophrenia" in which case that to me is not "in remission." If that is the case, then the whole time the girl in the book "It's Not Mental" was SICK the psychiatric community would have called that in remission. They did (stupidly in my opinion) call it "in recovery."
a big problem of 'schizophrenia' is the non-existence of biology involved. you can talk about genes all you want, . . . . i don't agree that schizophrenia is a biological disease though certainly i can be wrong. i see it more as thought malfunctioning and the brain's equilibrium being thrown off kilter. it's like a snow-globe and if you never stop shaking the snow globe you can't expect the snow to settle.
That is because they are calling different things schizophrenia. We are told they are at least a dozen different things, and there can be so many different sets of genes involved, or non at all. Author Lia Govers in "Healing from Schizophrenia" had an emotional problem. Author Jeanie Wolfson's family had a biological problem. The proof is in what eliminated their symptoms. Psychological therapies for Govers and biomedical (not psychiatric) therapies for Wolfson's.
i don't have a solid side on gluten-producing diagnoses and misdiagnoses. i personally think the industry is a delegate of different tests being carried out and have no reason to legitimately inform people.
In this
Gluten Sensitivity and Symptoms of Schizophrenia and
Brain Health: The Gluten (Dis)Connection you see there are tests available but they are not being used. But no test is needed. Some countries just go ahead and try diets on the patients without gluten (and maybe dairy). But that is too simple. For the people whose schizophrenia or bipolar was actually due to that problem, the drug makers would lose out on perhaps $15,000 per year for the life of the patient since they wouldn't need the medications. That would be... I don't know... let's say the person would live another 50 years. That's $750,000 or the whole "health" industry would lose out on about a million dollars per person they wouldn't get if we add in doctor visits and hospitalizations.
of all the tests i had done they would not let me see the results of 99% of them - they only let me see my brain scan to show that i didn't have a chip in there that is it. i could very well have blood deficiencies or heavy metal poisoning but they have never let me in on it one way or another.
WHAT!? THEY ARE
YOUR TESTS! THEY ARE
YOUR RESULTS!
Is that even legal for them to not show you test results? Do you have a case manager - a REAL social worker (one with a degree in
social work rather than the kind with a stupid sociology or psychology degree)? If so, have them fight for your right to see YOUR medical records!
Maybe you should start another thread about this topic - your rights to access your own medical records, and how you should go about it.