Chapter 12: Psychological Disorders Lectures 15 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Chapter 12: Psychological Disorders Lectures 15

Description:

Chapter 12: Psychological Disorders Lectures 15 & 16 ... occupy the same person Formerly known as multiple personality disorder Play Video (CD#2;31) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:496
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 66
Provided by: facultyUm7
Learn more at: https://faculty.uml.edu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chapter 12: Psychological Disorders Lectures 15


1
Chapter 12 Psychological DisordersLectures 15
16
2
Learning Outcomes
  • Define psychological disorders and describe their
    prevalence.
  • Describe the symptoms, types, and possible
    origins of schizophrenia.

3
Learning Outcomes
  • Describe the symptoms and possible origins of
    mood disorders.
  • Describe the symptoms and possible origins of six
    types of anxiety disorders.

4
Learning Outcomes
  • Describe the symptoms and possible origins of
    somatoform disorders.
  • Describe the symptoms and possible origins of
    dissociative disorders.
  • Describe the symptoms and possible origins of
    personality disorders.

5
Truth or Fiction?
  • In the Middle Ages, innocent people were drowned
    as a way of proving that they were not possessed
    by the Devil.
  • People with schizophrenia may see and hear things
    that are not really there.

6
Truth or Fiction?
  • Feeling elated may not be a good thing.
  • Some people have more than one personality
    dwelling within them, and each one may have
    different allergies and eyeglass prescriptions.
  • Some people can kill or maim others without
    feelings of guilt.

7
What is Normal?
8
1. When Behavior Is Abnormal/Disordered?
  • Several Questions can help determine when
    behavior is abnormal
  • Is the behavior considered strange within the
    persons own culture?
  • Does the behavior cause personal distress?
  • Is the behavior maladaptive?
  • Is the person a danger to self or others?
  • Is the person legally responsible for his or her
    act?

9
2. What Are Psychological Disorders?
  • Mental processes and/or behavior patterns that
    cause emotional distress and/or substantial
    impairment in functioning

10
3. Explaining Psychological Disorders
  • Biological Perspective
  • Genetics, evolution, the brain,
    neurotransmitters, hormones
  • Treatment
  • Diagnose and treat like any other physical
    disorder (drugs, electroconvulsive therapy, or
    psychosurgery)

11
4. Explaining Psychological Disorders
  • Biopsychosocial perspective
  • From combination of biological, psychological,
    social
  • Treatment
  • An eclectic approach employing treatments that
    include both drugs and psychotherapy

12
5. Explaining Psychological Disorders
  • Psychodynamic perspective
  • Disorders are symptoms of underlying unconscious
    processes that stem from childhood conflicts
  • Treatment
  • Bring disturbing repressed material to
    consciousness and help patient work through
    unconscious conflicts

13
6. Explaining Psychological Disorders
  • Learning perspective
  • Abnormal thoughts, feelings, behaviors are
    learned and sustained like any other behaviors,
    or there is a failure to learn appropriate
    behavior
  • Treatment
  • Use classical operant conditioning modeling
    to extinguish abnormal behavior and to increase
    adaptive behavior (behavior therapy, behavior
    modification)

14
7. Explaining Psychological Disorders
  • Cognitive Perspective
  • Faulty thinking or distorted perceptions can
    cause psychological disorders
  • Treatment
  • Change faulty, irrational, /or negative thinking
    (Becks cognitive therapy, rational-emotional
    therapy)

15
8. Classifying Psychological Disorders
  • Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM)
  • Includes information on medical conditions,
    psychosocial problems and global assessment of
    functioning
  • Concerns about reliability and validity of the
    standards
  • Predictive validity

16
9. Prevalence of Psychological Disorders
  • 50 of us will experience a psychological
    disorder at some time
  • Most often starts in childhood or adolescence
  • 25 will experience a psychological disorder in
    any given year,
  • More than 44 million adults, are diagnosed with
    mental disorder of some kind (NIMH, 2001)

17
10.Schizophrenia
  • DSM-IV
  • Characterized by the presence of psychotic
    symptoms, including hallucinations, delusions,
    disorganized speech, bizarre behavior, loss of
    contact with reality
  • Severe psychological disorder characterized by
    disturbances in
  • Thoughts, language memory
  • perception and attention
  • motor activity
  • mood
  • social interaction communication
  • Play Etta Video

18
Schizophrenia
PLAY VIDEO
19
11. Schizophrenia
  • Afflicts nearly 1 of the population worldwide
  • Onset occurs relatively early in life
  • Adverse effects tend to endure

20
12. Positive Versus Negative Symptoms
  • Positive symptoms
  • Excessive symptoms
  • Hallucinations, delusion, looseness of
    association
  • Negative symptoms (look in my book)
  • Deficiencies
  • Lack of emotional expression and motivation
  • Social withdrawal
  • Poverty of speech

21
13. Positive Versus Negative Symptoms
  • Positive symptoms
  • More likely an abrupt onset
  • Retain intellectual abilities
  • More favorable response to antipsychotic
    medication

22
14. Positive Versus Negative Symptoms
  • Negative symptoms
  • More likely a gradual onset
  • Severe intellectual impairments
  • Poorer response to antipsychotic medication

23
15. Types of Schizophrenia
  • Paranoid Schizophrenia
  • Systematized delusions
  • Disorganized Schizophrenia
  • Incoherence extreme social impairment
  • Catatonic Schizophrenia
  • Motor impairment waxy flexibility
  • Undifferentiated Schizophrenia
  • When symptoms do not conform to the criteria of
    any of one type of sch. Or conform to more than
    one type

24
16. Origins of Schizophrenia Biological
Perspectives
  • Brain abnormality
  • Risk factors
  • Heredity, major part
  • Complications during pregnancy and birth
  • Birth during winter
  • Dopamine theory of schizophrenia

25
17. The Biopsychosocial Model of Schizophrenia
26
18. Probability of Developing Schizophrenia
  • Identical twins
  • If one has schizophrenia, the other twin has 46
    chance also to develop it
  • In fraternal twins
  • 14 chance
  • One parent schizophrenic
  • 13 chance
  • Both parents
  • 46 chance
  • Data from Nicol Gottesman (1983)
  • Sibling
  • Less than 10
  • Nephew/niece
  • 2-3
  • SPOUSE
  • 2
  • Unrelated person
  • Less than 1

27
Mood Disorders
28
19. Mood Disorders
  • Characterized by extreme and unwarranted
    disturbances in emotion or mood

29
20. Types of Mood Disorders
  • Major Depressive Disorder (1 person in 5 or 6
    over the course of lifetime)
  • Persistent feelings of sadness, loss of interest,
    feelings of worthlessness or guilt, and inability
    to concentrate
  • Psychomotor retardation
  • Bipolar disorder (1.2 of the U.S. population)
  • Mood swings from ecstatic elation to deep
    depression

30
Expression of Mood
PLAY VIDEO
31
21. Origins of Mood Disorders
  • Biological
  • Genetic factors
  • Psychological (cognitive factors)
  • Learned helplessness
  • Perfectionism and unrealistic expectations
  • Ruminating about depression
  • Attributional styles (internal/external/global/sp
    ecific/stable/unstable)
  • Biopsychosocial
  • Biologically predisposed interact with
    self-efficacy expectations and attitudes

32
22. Risk Factors in Suicide
  • 31,000 American commit suicide each year.
  • Feelings of depression, hopelessness
  • What psychological problems are common for
    suicidal adolescents?
  • Stressful life events
  • Anxiety over discovery
  • Poor problem solver
  • Familial experience with psychological disorders
    and/or suicide

33
23. Sociocultural Factors in Suicide
  • Third leading cause of death among young people
    aged 15 to 24
  • More common among college students than people of
    the same age who do not attend college
  • Older people are more likely to commit suicide
    than teenagers

34
24. Sociocultural Factors in Suicide
  • One in six Native Americans has attempted suicide
  • African Americans are least likely to attempt
    suicide
  • Three times as many females attempt suicide
  • Four times as many males succeed in suicide

35
25. Myths about Suicide
  • Individuals who threaten suicide are only seeking
    attention
  • People who would take their own lives are insane
  • Discussing suicide with a depressed person

36
Anxiety Disorders
37
26. Anxiety Disorders
  • Phobias, panic disorder, generalized anxiety,
    OCD, stress disorders.
  • Psychological features of anxiety
  • Worrying, fear of worst case scenario,
    nervousness, inability to relax
  • Physical features of anxiety
  • Arousal of sympathetic branch of autonomic
    nervous system

38
27. Phobias
  • Specific phobias
  • Irrational fears of specific objects or
    situations
  • Social phobias
  • Persistent fears of scrutiny by others
  • Claustrophobia
  • Agoraphobia
  • Fear of being in places from which it would be
    difficult to escape or receive help

39
28. Panic Disorder
  • Abrupt attack of acute anxiety not triggered by a
    specific object or situation
  • Physical symptoms
  • Shortness of breath, heavy sweating, tremors,
    pounding of the heart
  • Other symptoms that may feel like a heart attack

40
Panic Disorder Symptoms
PLAY VIDEO
41
29. Generalized Anxiety Disorder
  • Persistent anxiety
  • Cannot be attributed to object, situation, or
    activity
  • Symptoms include
  • Motor tension
  • Autonomic overarousal
  • Excessive vigilance

42
30. Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
  • Obsessions
  • Recurrent, anxiety-provoking thoughts or images
    that seem irrational and beyond control
  • Compulsions
  • Thoughts or behaviors that tend to reduce the
    anxiety connected with obsessions
  • Irresistible urges to engage in specific acts,
    often repeatedly

43
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
PLAY VIDEO
44
31. Stress Disorders
  • Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTDS)
  • Caused by a traumatic event
  • May occur months or years after event
  • Acute stress disorder, within a month (2-4 wks)
  • Unlike PTDS, occurs within a month of event and
    lasts 2 days to 4 weeks

45
32. Sleep Problems Among Americans Before and
After September 11, 2001
46
33. Origins of Anxiety Disorders
  • Biological
  • Genetic factors
  • Psychological and Social
  • Phobias as conditioned fears
  • Cognitive bias toward focusing on threats
  • Biopsychosocial
  • Interaction between biological, psychological,
    social factors

47
Somatoform Disorders
48
34. Somatoform Disorders
  • Physical problems (such as paralysis, pain, or
    persistent belief of serious disease) with no
    evidence of a physical abnormality
  • Conversion disorder, hypochondriasis, body
    dysmorphic disorder

49
35. Conversion Disorder
  • convert a source of stress into a physical
    difficulty
  • Major change in, or loss of, physical
    functioning, although there are no medical
    findings to explain the loss of functioning.
  • Not intentionally produced
  • Loss of vision at night (pilots), paralyzed legs,
    loss of hearing, etc.

50
36. Hypochondriasis
  • Insistence of serious physical illness, even
    though no medical evidence of illness can be
    found
  • May seek opinion of one doctor after another

51
37. Body Dysmorphic Disorder
  • Preoccupation with a fantasized or exaggerated
    physical defect in their appearance
  • May assume others see them as deformed

52
38. Origins of Somatoform Disorders
  • Biopsychosocial perspective
  • Psychologically, the disorder has to do with what
    one focuses on to the exclusion of conflicting
    information
  • Self-hypnosis
  • Tendencies toward perfectionism and rumination
    (heritable)

53
Dissociative Disorders
54
39. Dissociative Disorders
  • Disorders in which, under unbearable stress,
    consciousness becomes dissociated from a persons
    identity or her or his memories of important
    personal events, or both
  • Trauma, usually psychological.
  • Dissociation- the loss of ones ability to
    integrate all the components of self into a
    coherent representation of ones identity.

55
40. Types of Dissociative Disorders
  • Dissociative Amnesia
  • Suddenly unable to recall important personal
    information not due to biological problems
  • Dissociative Fugue
  • Abruptly leaves home or work and travels to
    another place, no memory of previous life

56
41. Types of Dissociative Disorders
  • Dissociative Identity Disorder
  • Two or more identities, each with distinct
    traits, occupy the same person
  • Formerly known as multiple personality disorder
  • Play Video (CD231)

57
Personality Disorders
58
42. Personality Disorder
  • A long standing, inflexible, maladaptive pattern
    of behaving and relating to others, which usually
    begins in early childhood or adolescence.
  • Impair personal or social functioning
  • The most common of mental disorder (10-15)
  • Cause unknown, treatment options are few
  • Source of distress
  • Paranoid, schizotypal, schizoid, borderline,
    antisocial, avoidant personality disorder

59
43. Cluster A Odd Behavior
  • Paranoid Personality Disorder
  • Interpret others behavior as threatening or
    demeaning (Stalin)
  • Schizotypal Personality Disorder
  • Odd appearance, unusual thought patterns,
    perceptions, or behavior, lack of social skills
  • Schizoid Personality Disorder
  • Indifference to relationships and flat emotional
    response isolates self from others

60
44.Cluster B Erratic, overly dramatic behavior
  • Narcissistic, Histrionic, BPD, Antisocial
  • Borderline Personality Disorder
  • Instability in relationships, self-image, and
    mood
  • Antisocial Personality Disorder
  • Persistently violate the law
  • Show no guilt or remorse and are largely
    undeterred by punishment

61
45. Cluster C Anxious, fearful behavior
  • Obsessive-Compulsive Dependant
  • Avoidant Personality Disorder
  • Avoid relationships for fear of rejection

62
46. Origins of Personality Disorders
  • Biological
  • Genetic factors
  • Personality traits that may be inherited
  • Antisocial personality less gray matter in
    prefrontal cortex
  • Psychological
  • Learning theory
  • Childhood experiences
  • Cognitive
  • Misinterpretation of other peoples behaviors
  • Sociocultural
  • Borderline personality may reflect the
    fragmented society in which one lives

63
Warning Signs of Suicide
  • Changes in eating and sleeping patterns
  • Difficulty concentrating on school or the job
  • A sharp decline in performance and attendance at
    school or on the job
  • Loss of interest in previously enjoyed activities
  • Giving away prized possessions
  • Complaints about physical problems when no
    medical basis for problems can be found

64
Warning Signs of Suicide
  • Withdrawal from social relationships
  • Personality or mood changes
  • Talking or writing about death or dying
  • Abuse of drugs or alcohol
  • An attempted suicide
  • Availability of a handgun
  • A precipitating event

65
Warning Signs of Suicide
  • In the case of adolescents, knowing or hearing
    about another teenager who has committed suicide
    (which can lead to cluster suicides)
  • Threatening to commit suicide
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com