Monday, June 25, 2007

Schizophrenia: Stigma and Discrimination

I like to read over all the articles I write for my blogs. When I read over the entries I've written about schizophrenia and mental illness I've noticed that I have a main theme running through them all. I also read over comments I've made on other writers' blogs. I've also noticed this same theme running through these writings.

What is that theme? Stigma and discrimination.

Webster's English Dictionary states that the word stigmatize means "Disgrace." The same dictionary states that the word discriminate means "having the difference marked."

Applying these meanings to the way society views mental health consumers they have negative connotations. Society views us as a disgrace to humanity as a whole. We are also a marked group of people. We are marked as violent, unproductive members of society, useless, lazy, weak minded people, crazy, insane, not normal by societies standards, and the list can go on and on.

Many years ago mental health consumers were marked as servants of the devil, possessed by demons and spirits. As a result of this many consumers were put to death by the so called servants of Christ.

Later on when they started Asylums they were treated like animals in these places. Peoples pets lived like kings and were treated with more love and compassion than those in these institutions. At one point in history people paid to get into these places to watch the patients to ridicule, and laugh at for their own personal entertainment.

Then in the twentieth century those Doctors that treated the mentally ill in mental institutions discovered anti-psychotic medications. Consumers had some reprieve but still suffered tremendously. The way consumers were treated greatly improved but still not up to standards of the United Nations and our own Canadian Charter of Rights.

I must truly confess that we are treated a lot better than we were back in history. But despite that we are still treated like outcasts of society. We are still stigmatized and discriminated against. According to the Canadian Charter of Rights we have rights and not to be discriminated against. That looks good on paper and is just a big joke. In reality we are not accepted by society, we have trouble getting employment, we find it hard to get decent housing, and society as a whole will not have anything to do with those that have a mental illness.

As a result of the way mental illness affects a person many consumers are not able to work and hold down a job. The government supplies social assistance but that is also a big joke. Most consumers live in poverty. They live in housing that's not suitable for animals to live in. They go hungry the majority of the time. What food they do manage to purchase brings no health to their bodies. They have a lot of medical problems caused by their low standard of living.

The consumers that do manage to acquire social assistance live like kings compared to the consumers that have to live on the streets. I don't know exact statistics but it is common knowledge that the majority of people that live on the streets have some form of mental illness.

They don't have access to a decent bed to sleep in, they have no access to medical care for both their mental illness and other medical problems. They probably eat less than those fortunate enough to acquire social assistance.

Those consumers that are fortunate enough to recover well by that I mean those whose symptoms have been greatly reduced, and receive good psycho-social treatments. As a result they are able to be independent, have their own place, manage their money, cook their meals, keep up on house work, able to get an education, able to work at a full time job, and do all the things that the so called normal people are able to do.

Even this fortunate group of consumers are still stigmatized and discriminated against just as much as those not so fortunate group of consumers.

Those of us who are mental health consumers need to rise up and fight for our rights as Canadian Citizens. We need to stamp out the stigma and discrimination against us. We should have the same rights and opportunities as the rest of society. We should have access to decent housing, be able to find half-decent jobs, be able to get an education, and last of all we should be accepted by society and be able to partake in societal activities as one of them and not as outcasts.We need to be a part of the community not rejected by the community.

We consumers need to get together, get organized, and become activists, and start advocating for our rights as Canadian Citizens.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

I thought that this was really interesting. I hope you wouldn't mind if I included some of what you said into a research paper I'm doing for school. You will of course be credited for what you've said. I have no intention of taking anything word for word I was just looking for something real, something with substanced. Not just a definition off of WebMD. I feel bad for not getting your okay before hand. I hope you don't mind. Well thank you!

Tony said...

To Anonymous:

I have no problem with you using this article for your school research paper. My purpose for this blog is to get the word out there about the facts of mental illness and that people can and do recover. Also my intention is to educate society about mental illness and try to reduce some of that awful stigma out there.

Tony

Anonymous said...

For the past 3 months,I have been working on this personal project that i am supposed to base on something that interests me. After watching various shows like Law and Order, the movie A Beautiful Mind, Shutter Island, People Say Im Crazy, and how media portrays people with mental illnesses, such as the recent shoot in Tucson or the Virginia Tech incident, I was wondering about what you think about this issue. do you think that the media influences discrimination against people with schizophrenia, or mental illnesses in general? What do you think about the way the media portrays people diagnosed with these diseases to the public? Do you feel that the way the media portrays them has a big effect on how the public reacts when encountering someone?

(i would really appreciate you going more in depth on your thoughts about this issue and how you feel about how the media is reacting with the recent shootout in Tucson. i would love to know what you think, and also will be credited for what you said. thank you)

Tony said...

To Anonymous

I will give much thought to your questions. I will do a bit of research on these issues. Then I will write an article on this subject and post it on my blog for you and others to read.

Anonymous said...

I will also be using your information in a research paper if you dont mind. The information and opinions you have are very compelling and make a great point about our society and its discrimintation against anyone who is "different".