I’ve recently read Oliver
Sacks’ excellent book Hallucinations. It contains a wide range of accounts of
different medical conditions that can produce hallucinations or hallucinatory
experiences. As Sacks says: “In the popular imagination hallucinatory voices
are almost synonymous with schizophrenia – a great misconception, for most
people who do hear voices are not schizophrenic.”
In fact, most of the
conditions he writes about do not amount to mental illness at all. One such
example is Charles Bonnet Syndrome, where sufferers can experience very vivid visual
hallucinations.
For them, the condition is a
result of sight impairment, and Sacks discusses a range of conditions or
situations that produce hallucinations of various types as a result of sensory
deprivation of various kinds, ranging from physical states such as blindness to
self imposed states of sensory deprivation such as immersion in tanks of warm
salt water, where one can lie in a state of suspension and with the entire
absence of external stimuli.
It appears that when the
conscious brain has nothing to do, it can create often complex and elaborate,
but completely unreal, visual and auditory environments.
One of the crucial
distinctions between hallucinations arising from physical causes and those experienced
by people with psychosis is that the people experiencing these phenomena have
insight and recognise them not to be real, and don’tt have any accompanying
delusions.
One of Sacks’ conclusions
appears to be that hallucinations can be experienced by anyone, as a normal
part of life experience, whether as a result of some physical process, such as
migraine or epilepsy, or as an entirely normal part of the functioning of the
brain, such as hypnogogic hallucinations (hearing or seeing something when
about to fall asleep) or sleep paralysis, which can occur when someone is
waking up from sleep, during which time the person can believe themselves to be
awake when in fact they are still asleep.
The fact that experiencing
hallucinations does not invariably mean that someone is mentally ill is an
important factor to consider when assessing people’s mental health, whether
under the Mental Health Act, or as a standard mental health assessment, and
it’s important to keep an open mind and to look for alternative explanations.
When I worked in a community
mental health team, we conducted standard assessments which included the
question “Have you ever heard a voice when there has been no-one around?”
Probably around 15% of those I asked answered that they did, but hardly any of
them appeared to be psychotic.
One woman told me that every
day, as she walked with her child to school, she would hear a voice calling her
name at a particular point on the journey. I asked her what she did about it.
“Oh,” she said, “I decided to
take a different route to school, and I never heard the voice again.”
I always tried to be open
minded when I was listening to patients telling me about their experiences.
Sometimes what someone says may seem so unlikely as to be a sign of mental
disorder, but which later turns out to be true.
One example was Edna, a lady in
her late 80’s who lived in an old semi-detached flint cottage in the town where
I worked. She complained to her doctor that she kept hearing strange noises in
her house and feared that the house was haunted. Concerned that she was
experiencing auditory hallucinations, the doctor arranged for an older people’s
mental health nurse to visit her.
Edna was insistent that she
was indeed hearing strange noises. She knew they were in the house, but could
not identify where they were coming from. However, as no untoward sounds were
apparent while the nurse was there, the nurse became convinced that the only
explanation was that Edna had dementia. He persuaded her to be admitted to
hospital for further assessment.
A few days later, the nurse
went to her house to collect some personal effects for her. While there, he was
startled to hear inexplicable noises emanating from somewhere within the
cottage, when he knew there was no-one else in the property.
It eventually transpired that
the two cottages both had cellars, although Edna’s cellar was not accessible
from her house. The next door neighbour had knocked his own cellar through into
the lady’s cellar and had been converting it into additional accommodation for
himself.
Edna had been hearing her neighbour’s d-i-y activities directly beneath her feet.
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