This description is provided by the ICD-10 (International Classification of Diseases).
SPD is relatively rare compared with other personality disorders, being estimated at less than 1% of the general population. It is believed by some to correlate with the INTJ and INTP personality types in the Myers-Briggs type indicator. SPD is far more common amongst males than females, although this could be due in part to the fact that schizoid symptoms are far less socially acceptable in women.
SPD shares several aspects with depression, avoidant personality disorder[?] and Asperger's Syndrome, and can be difficult to distinguish from these other disorders. However, there are some important differentiating features:
It is disputed whether SPD should be considered a "disorder" at all, since it does not necessarily involve any suffering either for the affected individual or those around him. Many people are critical of society's tendency to pathologise certain personality traits simply because they are not compatible with the status quo. However in some cases, strong SPD symptoms may result in an affected person living a dull and unfulfilling life.
There is also disagreement about the relationship between SPD and schizophrenia. Some argue that the two conditions are entirely unrelated except by the origin of the word (meaing "split", in the case of SPD it is the individual that is "split" from society, rather than the actual mind being damaged), while others maintain that SPD exhibits a subset of the symptoms of schizophrenia and may, in rare cases, be an indicator of the onset of the more serious disease.
Search Encyclopedia
|
Featured Article
|