Spontaneous psychiatric treatment Schizophrenia is a psychosis characterized by disorders of various symptoms, emotions and thoughts. This is an incurable disease whose cause is unknown, but its effects are physical and psychic paralysis. (Young, 1988, p. 13-14) This topic was chosen because it is interesting to study the disease in the world, and it is seen as a typical example of madness and insanity. Another interesting reason is that, unlike many diseases, there is no obvious pattern of schizophrenia, it is difficult to be diagnosed as a disease, and it is difficult to collect statistical data.
Over the years, the use of involuntary therapy and the use of the term "lack of insight" has become controversial in explaining patients. Although the mental health law varies widely from jurisdictional area, in many cases involuntary psychiatric treatment is permitted if it is considered to pose a risk to the patient or other person due to the patient's illness. Non-voluntary treatment is a treatment that is performed without patient consent, based on advice from a treating doctor. Psychiatric treatment has changed over the past few decades. In the past, people with mental illness are often hospitalized for more than 6 months, and in some cases they were hospitalized for years. In most countries today, people receiving psychiatric treatment are more likely to be considered outpatients. When hospitalization is necessary, the average length of stay is about 1 to 2 weeks, and only a few people will receive long-term hospitalization.
Irritant hospitalization is often the first step in establishing psychiatric treatment for individuals in need of mental health services. However, in some cases, abuse of treatment-based criteria leads to institutional entry of individuals without mental disorders and hospitalization may benefit non-subjective spouses and relatives. In the age of civil rights, the non-institutional movement in the United States aims at simultaneously changing commitment standards to risk-based criteria, while also protecting mentally ill patients from improper autonomy. This change has caused various problems such as migration from evacuation centers to prisons of mentally ill patients and homeless epidemics among people with psychiatric disorders.
Slavery of movables is wrong and spiritual slavery is also wrong. Psychiatric enslavement is equivalent to mad defense, involuntary psychiatric treatment and citizen's commitment. Supporters of these things believe that involuntary treatment is useful for involuntary clients / patients. This may be so. In any case, if someone does not want help, they should not put pressure on them. If the psychiatric disorder is disabled, that name does not mean they are, then their treatment should be arbitrary, as with fractures and cancer treatments. However, if a mental disorder is a psychological barrier as its name is, it is not a medical problem, because they are moral, moral, legal, economic and social issues, their treatment is still It should be optional. I think that unwilling psychiatry should be condemned.