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What does “psychosis” actually mean, and how do clinicians recognize it in practice? In this episode, we define psychosis as a syndrome (not a single diagnosis) and walk through the core symptom domains: delusions, hallucinations, disorganized thinking/speech, disorganized behavior, and negative symptoms. We focus on the differential diagnosis, including how to distinguish schizophrenia-spectrum and schizoaffective disorders from mood disorders with psychotic features, trauma-related phenomena, borderline personality disorder, neurodevelopmental presentations (including autism spectrum traits), and substance-induced psychosis. We share red flags that can be easy to miss, like new-onset suspiciousness, functional decline, social withdrawal, and subtle thought disorganization, and we emphasize the value of collateral history and longitudinal follow-up. We close with treatment implications: when antipsychotics are helpful, why risks and benefits need to be individualized, and when psychotherapy and supportive interventions are the better first move. Educational disclaimer: This episode is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice.
By Psychiatry, Skepticism, and Integration.4.8
7777 ratings
What does “psychosis” actually mean, and how do clinicians recognize it in practice? In this episode, we define psychosis as a syndrome (not a single diagnosis) and walk through the core symptom domains: delusions, hallucinations, disorganized thinking/speech, disorganized behavior, and negative symptoms. We focus on the differential diagnosis, including how to distinguish schizophrenia-spectrum and schizoaffective disorders from mood disorders with psychotic features, trauma-related phenomena, borderline personality disorder, neurodevelopmental presentations (including autism spectrum traits), and substance-induced psychosis. We share red flags that can be easy to miss, like new-onset suspiciousness, functional decline, social withdrawal, and subtle thought disorganization, and we emphasize the value of collateral history and longitudinal follow-up. We close with treatment implications: when antipsychotics are helpful, why risks and benefits need to be individualized, and when psychotherapy and supportive interventions are the better first move. Educational disclaimer: This episode is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice.

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