Important Terms to Know
Since you are going to be speaking with healthcare professionals, it will help to be familiar with some of the terms they may use. The list below contains some of the common terms you should know. Learning what they mean may help you understand more about schizophrenia.
Active listening: A way of listening in which a person shows interest in what another person is saying and shows that they understand their point of view.
Affective flattening: When a person doesn't have an emotional response, or has an inappropriate response, to what's going on around him or her.
Agitated: Feeling restless and anxious.
Alogia: Not talking a lot, and not being able to think clearly. It's when someone has difficulty speaking with others, sometimes just giving short answers.
Atypical antipsychotic: A class of drug developed and first used in the 1990s that can help control the symptoms of schizophrenia.
Avolition: When a person doesn't feel like doing anything at all. A person may sit for long periods of time and show little interest in participating in work or everyday activities, like bathing or getting dressed.
Caregivers: People who take care of a family member or friend.
Catatonic behavior: Not being active in any way at all, as if in a stupor or a trance. May appear as one of the positive symptoms of schizophrenia.
Conventional antipsychotic: This class of drug has been used for over 50 years to help control the symptoms of schizophrenia.
Delusions: Strongly believing in ideas that are false; for example, believing that a light bulb is sending secret messages or that the FBI can read one’s thoughts. May appear as one of the positive symptoms of schizophrenia.
Disorganized behavior: Behaving in a way that seems unpredictable or silly to onlookers. May appear as one of the positive symptoms of schizophrenia.
Disorganized speech: Ongoing, rambling speech that does not make any sense. May appear as one of the positive symptoms of schizophrenia.
Hallucinations: Hearing, seeing, feeling, tasting, or smelling something that other people aren't experiencing. The most common hallucinations are those that affect hearing, such as hearing imaginary voices. A person with schizophrenia may be seen talking to imaginary people. May appear as one of the positive symptoms of schizophrenia.
Healthcare professional: Someone who is trained to treat people with schizophrenia and/or other diseases.
Impulsive: Doing something without thinking about it first.
Long-acting antipsychotic injectable medication: A type of medication that is released slowly and steadily in the body, allowing the medicine to work for weeks at a time. As a result, the medicine does not need to be taken every day.
Motivation: A person’s real reason for doing or saying something.
Negative symptoms: Refers to a lack of behaviors or feelings that are normally present. Negative symptoms include affective flattening, alogia, and avolition.
Oral medication: A type of medication taken by mouth that comes in a variety of forms including tablet, capsule, and liquid forms.
Peer support: A group of other individuals with schizophrenia. Or a group made up of people who care for people with schizophrenia. They meet to socialize and support each other because they know what each other is going through.
Personal hygiene (self-care): Keeping your body clean, like taking showers, combing your hair, and brushing your teeth.
Positive symptoms: Seeing, feeling, hearing, or tasting things that other people aren't experiencing. Also, disorganized speech and behavior.
Psychotic episode: An often sudden appearance of symptoms when a person is not able to tell the difference between what is real and unreal and likely requires care.
Recovery: For a person living with schizophrenia, it's an ongoing, personal process of working to achieve personal goals despite having an illness. Recovery is not a cure for schizophrenia.
Relapse: When the symptoms of schizophrenia come back or get worse after a patient has become stable.
Schizophrenia: A mental illness that can affect a person's ability to think clearly, manage feelings, make decisions, and relate to others. It can last a lifetime, but it is manageable.
Self-care (personal hygiene): Attention to personal grooming, such as brushing or combing hair, bathing, and getting dressed.
Sensory overload: When too much is happening at once around a person, causing them to feel overwhelmed.
Treatment: Medical care for an illness or injury.
