We have to find what the best treatment is, and we have to make some adaptations in our life. And I try to get them to think of it like a vitamin. A vitamin doesn't cure you of anything, but a vitamin can help build up your stamina and it can build up your defenses against illness.
Ultimately, it's the person's decision. I just try to give them the information and I tell them, "If I were in your shoes or if this were my child, this is what I would do."
How do you handle someone who is hallucinating?
It would be the equivalent of a heart attack to me. Often, people see these behaviors as a matter of choice and really are not aware of what's going on inside the person. What they would need immediately from the parents would be the same thing as calling 9-1-1 if your kid clutched their chest and keeled over: it's a medical emergency.
Could a parent do anything to comfort the child?
You try to make the person feel safe. They may perceive their family members as the enemy and may not be clear on what the family member wants to do by taking them to a psychologist, a clinical nurse specialist or a psychiatrist for an evaluation. They may feel even more threatened.
A lot of times, the way these young people get their first treatment is they really have to be taken to a psychiatrist hospital against their will, which is horribly traumatic. It's just a devastating way to start, but that's what happens sometimes, unfortunately.
Is there any place a family can turn to for help?
I advise everyone to get in contact with the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI). They are a wonderful resource for advocacy and education and they hold family group therapy sessions. It's helpful if they can find someone who they can trust, someone accessible that can help them through this process, because everybody needs help. The patient needs help, but the family needs help, too. And I would say, most times, people haven't a clue about schizophrenia, and they think it's like the measles; that you get over it.
We have to be positive, especially with the new medicines. But I would say, for the most part, if you can keep the psychotic exacerbations to a minimum, the odds are greatly increased for leading a more normal life.