Schizophrenia is not listed in the book’s example list of conditions that Coherence Therapy might work for; there is a case study of a woman who hears hallucinatory voices, though the report states that “She did not fit the typical pattern of schizophrenia, which was the diagnosis she had been given”. The general impression I get is that the writer treats them as a psychotic symptom related to her depression rather than her being schizophrenic in general.
I don’t feel like I know enough about schizophrenia to put it in a subagent context.
Schizophrenia is not listed in the book’s example list of conditions that Coherence Therapy might work for; there is a case study of a woman who hears hallucinatory voices, though the report states that “She did not fit the typical pattern of schizophrenia, which was the diagnosis she had been given”. The general impression I get is that the writer treats them as a psychotic symptom related to her depression rather than her being schizophrenic in general.
I don’t feel like I know enough about schizophrenia to put it in a subagent context.
Thanks!