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Running head: SCHIZOPHRENIA 1

Schizophrenia

PSYCH311

Sister Dance
SCHIZOPHRENIA 2

Abstract

This provides a summary and overview of the paper and the topics discussed. Including that of:

the history of schizophrenia, different treatment approaches through the ages, the statistics

behind the disease, and the major contributors of finding out what it really is. Other topics are

open for discussion that may not be listed above. (150-250 words)
SCHIZOPHRENIA 3

Schizophrenia

An Overview of the Mental Illness

Schizophrenia is a mental illness that can be found in approximately 1.1% of the

population. Continue on..

An In-depth History of Schizophrenia

So here I plan on writing about the first cases of schizophrenia that are observed. Also,

when the mental illness became acknowledged and who acknowledged it first.

Critical People

Within this section, a sub heading will involve the people that helped make the disease

known and the countries and areas where this stemmed from.

Person One. Obviously this will be person one

Person Two. Insert awesome person number two here and so on and so forth.

Historical Approaches to Treatment

This section is pretty self-explanatory. I will cover different people and the approaches

taken to heal their patients from as far back as I can find.

A Modern Approach to Treatment

This section will provide the reader with a bit more of a modern approach to treatment

that will help them understand more of what people are doing with the illness.
SCHIZOPHRENIA 4

References

Adler, K. A. (1979). An Adlerian view of the development and the treatment of

schizophrenia. Journal Of Individual Psychology (00221805), 35(2), 147.

Gallagher III, B. J., Jones, B. J., & Barakat, L. P. (1987). The attitudes of psychiatrists toward

etiological theories of schizophrenia: 1975-1985. Journal Of Clinical Psychology, 43(4),

438-443.

Newmark, C. S., Falk, R., Boren, R., & Finch Jr., A. J. (1976). Validation of an empirically

derived set of symptom clusters to diagnose schizophrenia. .Journal Of Clinical

Psychology, 32(2), 459-462.

Silverstein, M. L., & Chaifetz, R. A. (1984). Examining the chapman and chapman theory of

schizophrenia through continuous word association with two nosological

systems. .Journal Of Clinical Psychology, 40(5), 1127-1135.

Taylor, E. H. (1987). The biological basis of schizophrenia. Social Work, 32(2), 115.

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