In Qatar, schizophrenia is managed by psychiatrys. Schizophrenia is a chronic psychiatric illness in which disturbances of perception, thought, motivation, and cognition emerge — most often in late adolescence or early adulthood — and persist long enough to disrupt work, school, and relationships. About 0.7-1% of people develop schizophrenia in their lifetime, and roughly 24 million people are affected worldwide.
Schizophrenia (ICD-10: F20; DSM-5-TR 295.90) is a chronic neurodevelopmental disorder of psychosis defined by at least two of five core symptoms — delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech, grossly disorganized or catatonic behavior, and negative symptoms (diminished emotional expression or avolition) — persisting for at least one month, with continuous signs of disturbance for at least six months and clear functional decline in work, social, or self-care domains. Schizoaffective disorder, substance/medication-induced psychotic disorder, and psychotic features of a primary mood disorder must be excluded. The illness is conceptualized in three symptom dimensions: positive symptoms (hallucinations and delusions), negative symptoms (anhedonia, alogia, avolition, asociality, blunted affect), and cognitive symptoms (impaired attention, working memory, and processing speed). Pathophysiology involves dopamine hyperactivity in mesolimbic pathways, dopamine hypoactivity in prefrontal cortex, glutamatergic NMDA-receptor hypofunction, GABAergic interneuron dysfunction, subtle gray-matter loss visible on MRI, and disrupted neural connectivity.
The key symptoms of Schizophrenia are: Auditory hallucinations, most commonly voices commenting on the person's actions, conversing with each other, or issuing commands — present in roughly 70% of patients during an acute episode., Delusions, which are fixed false beliefs held despite contradictory evidence; persecutory, referential, grandiose, religious, and somatic themes are typical, and a feeling of thought insertion or external control is highly characteristic of schizophrenia., Disorganized speech such as derailment (loose associations), tangentiality, incoherence ("word salad"), and neologisms, which reflect underlying disorganized thinking and interfere with conversation., Grossly disorganized or catatonic behavior — unpredictable agitation, inappropriate dress or hygiene, childlike silliness, or the immobility, mutism, and posturing of catatonia., Negative symptoms including diminished emotional expression (blunted affect), avolition (loss of goal-directed activity), alogia (poverty of speech), anhedonia, and asociality — often the most disabling features over years and the slowest to improve with treatment., Cognitive impairment in attention, working memory, processing speed, and executive function that predates the first episode by years and accounts for much of the long-term functional disability., Lack of insight (anosognosia), present in roughly 50-80% of patients during acute episodes, in which the person does not recognize they are ill — a key driver of treatment refusal and relapse..
Schizophrenia is a clinical diagnosis made through detailed history, mental status examination, collateral information from family, and a structured medical and substance workup to exclude mimics. The DSM-5-TR requires at least two of five core symptoms (delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech, grossly disorganized or catatonic behavior, negative symptoms), with at least one being delusions, hallucinations, or disorganized speech. Symptoms must persist for one month of active phase, with continuous disturbance for six months, and produce functional decline. Schizoaffective disorder, mood disorders with psychotic features, substance-induced psychosis, and psychosis due to another medical condition must be specifically excluded. Medical workup at first presentation excludes secondary causes: comprehensive metabolic panel, CBC, TSH, vitamin B12 and folate, HIV and syphilis serology in higher-risk patients, urine drug screen for amphetamines, cannabis, cocaine, and hallucinogens, ceruloplasmin in young adults to exclude Wilson disease, anti-NMDA receptor antibodies if there is rapid neurologic decline, autoimmune workup if there are systemic features, and MRI brain when neurologic signs, late onset (>40), or atypical presentation suggest organic disease. EEG is appropriate when seizure-related psychosis is suspected. Suicide-risk assessment is mandatory at every visit using the Columbia C-SSRS or equivalent. The Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) and the briefer PANSS-6 quantify symptom severity and treatment response in research and increasingly in routine clinical care. Coordinated specialty care programs (the US RAISE-ETP model and European EASA model) front-load assessment and intervention at first episode, demonstrably improving 2-year remission, functional, and quality-of-life outcomes versus standard care.
Course is heterogeneous. Roughly one-third of patients achieve sustained symptomatic and functional recovery, one-third have persistent but manageable symptoms with partial functional recovery, and one-third have severe persistent illness with significant disability (Hegarty 1994 meta-analysis, refined by Jääskeläinen 2013 — pooled recovery rate ~13.5% by stricter modern criteria). With coordinated specialty care and early intervention, 2-year remission rates reach 50-60% and competitive employment 40-50%. The single strongest predictor of outcome is medication adherence: relapse rates fall from 60-80% per year off medication to 15-25% on consistent treatment, and from there to ~10% with long-acting injectables. Negative symptoms and cognitive impairment drive long-term disability more than positive symptoms, and respond less to antipsychotics. Suicide accounts for roughly 5% of lifetime mortality, with highest risk in the first 5-10 years after diagnosis and in young men with preserved insight; clozapine uniquely reduces suicide risk. Life expectancy is shortened by 10-20 years compared with the general population, largely from cardiovascular disease, diabetes, smoking-related illness, and accidents — addressing these comorbidities is as important as managing psychosis.
Every first-episode psychosis should be evaluated by a psychiatrist, ideally within a coordinated specialty care or early intervention program (RAISE-ETP, EASA, or equivalent). Refer urgently for catatonia, command hallucinations, suicidal or homicidal ideation, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, acute dystonic reactions, suspected autoimmune encephalitis, or rapid neurologic decline. Treatment-resistant cases (failure of two adequate antipsychotic trials) require psychiatry assessment for clozapine initiation. Pregnancy, postpartum, geriatric onset, and significant medical comorbidity also warrant specialist involvement.
Find specialists →After starting antipsychotic medication, agitation and sleep typically improve within 1-3 days, positive symptoms (hallucinations, delusions) reduce over 2-6 weeks, and full response to a first adequate trial is seen by week 6-8. Negative symptoms and cognitive deficits improve more slowly over months, often plateauing partially. After a first episode, antipsychotic continuation for at least 1-2 years is recommended; discontinuation within 12 months produces relapse in 60-80% of patients. Coordinated specialty care over 2 years after first episode achieves 50-60% remission and substantial functional gains. For treatment-resistant schizophrenia, clozapine response typically emerges over 12-24 weeks and can continue improving for up to a year.
Aim for 30-45 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic exercise 3-5 days per week, supplemented by resistance training twice weekly. Exercise improves mood, sleep, cardiometabolic risk, and cognitive function in schizophrenia, and partially counteracts antipsychotic-related weight gain (Firth 2017 meta-analysis). Group-based exercise adds social benefit. Start gradually after a long sedentary period, especially in patients with clozapine-related myocarditis or cardiovascular comorbidity.
Look for a psychiatrist board-certified by the ABPN with experience in psychotic disorders, ideally connected to a coordinated specialty care or early intervention program for first-episode patients. For treatment-resistant cases, choose a clinic with clozapine experience and the laboratory infrastructure for monitoring. Continuity matters more than prestige — schizophrenia care is a multi-year relationship, and consistent rapport with the same prescriber, therapist, and case manager predicts adherence and outcome. For families, prioritize teams that offer family psychoeducation and shared decision-making rather than information-only visits.
Medically reviewed by AIHealz Medical Editorial Board · May 12, 2026
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