These at-risk individuals may have weak or
transient psychotic symptoms, and already show schizophrenia-like brain
changes, Dr. G. Paul Amminger of The University of Melbourne in
Australia, a researcher on the study, told Reuters Health. But while
psychiatrists now know how to identify these individuals, he added,
they don't know what to do with them. "At the moment there's no
state-of-the-art guideline (on) how to treat those people."
Prescribing antipsychotic medications may be helpful, Amminger
added, but these medications have serious side effects, and can also be
stigmatizing. "For young people they don't want to commit themselves to
a treatment which they might need to take for the next five to ten
years," he said. Furthermore, only about a third of people at high risk
for psychotic disorders will go on to develop full-fledged mental
illness in a given year.
Read the complete story at Reuters.