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Bipolar Vs Schizophrenia

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For my topic, I have will be discussing the similarities and differences between two severe types of mental disorders; Bipolar disorder and Schizophrenia. Bipolar disorder is a mental disorder that is associated with mood swings; mood swings that are associated with depression and mania. Schizophrenia is a mental disorder that drastically affects the way a person thinks, feels, and behaves; which also contains symptoms of delusions and hallucinations. Many people today have common misconceptions about these two mental disorders and they are often confused as the same thing but they are entirely different and that is what I am going to be arguing about with the help of descriptive statistics; which is a general picture of scores within a certain …show more content…

The two mood swings they often experience are depression and mania, which can often last to a few weeks or even months. Bipolar disorder has two different types; the first type is called Bipolar 1, they experience two mood swings that are depression and mania, the second type is called Bipolar 2 is much more mild than the first type but it ultimately involves hypomania with episodes of depression such as the first, just more mild. Some symptoms of mania include impulsive behavior, jumpiness, poor judgment, and agitation. Some symptoms of depression include hopelessness, poor appetite, extreme sadness, withdrawal from friends, and a loss of interests in social activities. Bipolar Disorder is most common in China, India, and then the United States. It drastically affects about 12 to 15 million people in India and China, and 2.2 million people in the United States according to pendulum.org. Although China and India have the two highest rates of bipolar disorder, we will be mostly be focusing on and discussing how bipolar disorder affects the people in the United States. According to bipolar-lives.com, “Bipolar disorder affects approximately 5.7 million adult Americans, or about 2.6% of the U.S. population age 18 and older every year.” That drastically affects many young adults every single year, ranging from 18-25 year old adults but, it is also a disorder that can develop in young children as …show more content…

This disorder is also a mental disorder, but it is slightly less common than bipolar disorder. It drastically affects the way a person thinks, feels, and behaves. They often have feelings of being out of touch with reality and even experience delusions and hallucinations. Hallucinations are seeing or hearing things or people that aren’t actually there, similar to delusions which is believing something that isn’t physically real or true. This disorder does have three main phases such as prodromal, active, and residual. The prodromal phase shows beginning symptoms, which are non-psychotic. The symptoms include isolation, loss of interest in activities, and the display of less emotions. The active phase, also called the acute phase contains semi-psychotic symptoms like hallucinations, delusions, disordered thinking, and serious motor dysfunction. During the residual phase, the the delusions and hallucinations may have stopped, but low energy levels, social withdrawal, and lack of emotion remain. With this disorder over fifty-one billion people worldwide suffer from schizophrenia; 4.3 to 4.8 million in India, 6 to 12 million in China, and around 2 million people in the United States. According to schizophrenia.com, “about 1.5 million people will be diagnosed with schizophrenia this year, worldwide. About 100,000 people in the United States will be diagnosed with

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