Drug therapy: typical and atypical antipsychotics
Doctors treat schizophrenia with antipsychotic drugs. Older 'typical' drugs mainly reduce hallucinations and delusions. Newer 'atypical' drugs also target negative symptoms like avolition with fewer side effects.
Real World
Chlorpromazine, introduced in the 1950s, was so effective at reducing hallucinations that it triggered widespread deinstitutionalisation — thousands of patients who had lived in psychiatric hospitals for decades were able to return to the community for the first time.
Exam Focus
Contrast typical and atypical drugs on two dimensions: receptor action and side-effect profile; examiners reward precise pharmacological comparison.
Evaluation Scaffold
A four-step framework for high-quality evaluation. Use this for 'assess', 'evaluate', and 'to what extent' questions.
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