Title: Mental illness: Around the world
1Mental illness Around the world
- Disorders are often attributed to inaccurate
beliefs - e.g.,
- Windigo - an animal spirit enters your body and
you must then consume human flesh (young
Algonquin tribal warriors). Tx by killing the
individual. - Koro - belief that your genitals are retracting
into your - abdomen (Malaysian men - word for tortoise). Tx
with - pegs, clamps, concerned family members.
- Body dysmorphic disorder?
- Delusional disorder?
2Mental illness In the U.S.
- Each year there are over 2 million admissions to
mental hospitals/psychiatric units in the U.S. - As many as 1 in 5 are judged to need such
services - Deinstitutionalization in the 1950s due to advent
of psychotropic medications - Szaszs view (The myth of mental illness) is in
contrast to the general medical model of
psychiatric illness. - Over medicating children?
3Criteria for abnormal behavior?
- Deviant relative to norms (time and place)
- Distress ego dystonic or creates distress in
others - Dysfunction work, relationships
- Danger to self (the inability to care for
self or active - threat) or others
- All disorders in the U.S. are defined by the
DSM-IV
4Phobias (fears)
- Anxiety results from thinking about or being
exposed to something. Intense fear that is
non-normative and results in a dysfunction. - Specific phobias (e.g., arachnophobia,
ophidiophobia, acrophobia, aerophobia) involve a
single stimulus - Agoraphobia (market place), social phobia
(performance, social settings), and generalized
anxiety disorder are not commonly associated with
a single stimulus - Behavioral interventions work well for specific
phobias (tx is generally less successful for
others) - Anti-anxiety medications (e.g., Xanax) are
commonly administered as tx
5Obsessive-compulsive dis.
- Obsessions intrusive thoughts (e.g., hands are
dirty, your children are in danger, etc.) - Compulsions behaviors intended to address the
intrusive thoughts these rarely occur in the
absence of obsessions (e.g., washing, checking) - e.g., Howard Hughes?
- Also treated with behavioral interventions
(exposure with response inhibition) in
combination with medications to reduce anxiety
6Major Depression
- Marked by extreme sadness, crying, lack of
motivation, isolation, disturbance of sleep,
appetite, sex drive, may include suicide
attempts - 10 incidence in U.S. 25 for lifetime
- Twice as common in women with 1st episode usually
occurring at 24-29 yrs! - Exogenous vs. endogenous
- Differ re cause, course, and treatment success
- Tx most successfully with cognitive interventions
7Treatment for depression
- Beck/Ellis cognitive restructuring
- Errors in thinking, automatic thoughts,
overgeneralization, learned helplessness, etc. - Tx with medications that alter dopamine and/or
seratonin levels (reuptake or release) e.g.,
Prozac, recent study on SSRIs shows them to be
minimally effective (no significant improvement
over placebo) - Effects of antidepressants may be due to the fact
that they result in neurogenesis (Duman Hen,
2003 Science) - This would explain the 3-4 week delay in the
effects - ECT highest efficacy, low cost, and fewest
side-effects
8Past suicide attempts do not predict a successful
suicide.
0
9Suicidal behavior
- 3 criteria necessary for an involuntary
hospitalization - 1. Thoughts thoughts about ones own death
- 2. Plan explicit plan on how to commit suicide
- 3. Access to means able to execute plan
- Gender differences females 4X more likely to
attempt and males 3X more likely to succeed
(similar overall rates of suicide) - Effects of method (e.g., differences in
lethality) - Best predicted by past attempts, psychiatric
conditions, presence of firearms, and
alcohol/drugs
10Bipolar disorders
- Previously referred to as manic-depression
- Bipolar disorders involve some combination of
depression and manic episodes (little or no
sleep, excessive energy, spending sprees,
hypersexual, impulsive travel). - Onset is typically late 20s and 30s
- Mood stabilizers such as lithium are used
- Psychotic experiences can occur (manic state)
- Cycling of moods varies considerably
11Schizophrenia
- Break from reality
- Delusions - what makes a belief delusional?
- Not just an inaccurate belief
- Also conviction, resistance to change,
normativeness, impact - From Trekkie to nut
- Hallucinations perceptual aberrations
- Auditory, visual, tactile, and/or olfactory
- Hallucinations may be causally linked to
delusions - Both referred to as positive symptoms
12Schizophrenia - continued
- Types included Paranoid (persecutory, grandeur,
erotomatic), catatonic (motor retardation),
disorganized (cognitive behavioral confusion),
undifferentiated - Negative symptoms include loss of
motivation/interest, disorganized speech, flat
affect - Incidence is approx 1, though higher if you
include personality versions (milder forms) - Onset varies, but the earlier the poorer the
prognosis
13Delusional disorders
- Delusional disorder only symptom manifested is
the delusion itself - Brief psychotic episode may be associated with
a major life change such as a postpartum
psychotic episode (.1) - Shared psychotic disorder more than 1
individual sharing the same delusion - Capgrass syndrome specific delusion involving
the replacement of people with look-a-likes - Psychosis proneness Chapman Chapman
14Causal Features?
- Cognitive deficits no real reasoning deficits,
but such individuals do show a bias for arriving
at conclusion based on less evidence and then
maintaining those delusions (colored beans in a
jar study) - Psychosis proneness predicts the endorsement of
abnormal attributions in college students - Genetic features incidence is 48 if both
parents or an identical twin has schizophrenia,
but only 17 if fraternal twin or 1 parent has it
15Treatments - continued
- Almost always involve psychotropic meds
especially to treat the positive symptoms - Dopamine hypothesis (excess dopaminergic
activity) - These drugs typically have very strong side
effects - Complete resolution is not common, though
individuals can lead functional lifestyles - Other models? (enlarged ventricles so less brain
matter, eye tracking problems, inadequate early
reinforcement, latent homosexuality, etc.)
16Eating disorders
- Anorexia nervosa extreme weight loss with
persistent belief that one is fat, intense
fear/guilt of gaining weight, 90 of cases occur
in females - When emaciated females are amenorrhea
- Typically occurs in 1 of females aged 12-18yrs
(early college late high school) - Largely limited to Western cultures
- Bulimia nervosa combination of binging and
purging (the latter can be vomiting, laxatives,
or excessive exercise) - With expanded definition it is almost as common
in males (45)
17Causal factors?
- Major emphasis is on social and cultural factors
- Physiological effects can occur as a result of
semi-starved diet - Observed in rats that are placed on such diets
and given an exercise wheel - Prisoners on semi-starved diets likewise
displayed preoccupation with food - Effects of excessive exercise and diets?
18Somatoform disorders
- Hypochondriasis preoccupation and fear of
illness - Somatization disorder endorsement of many
symptoms with no apparent physical cause - Body dysmorphic disorder preoccupation with a
perceived physical deficit - Conversion disorder (indifference, selective
symptoms, selective demonstration, neurological
nonsense) - Pseudocyesis false belief of being pregnant
with physical consequences (enlarged abdominal
area and lactation)
19DID (formerly MPD)
- Dissociative identity disorder loss of time
(amnesia), and a minimum of two distinct
identities. - How many identities?
- Knowledge between identities?
- 1-4 incidence (small percentage of doctors
diagnose virtually all cases)
20Which is NOT a symptom of conversion disorder?
- Indifference
- Relief from responsibility
- Neurologically impossible
- Lack of awareness of the symptom
- Selective presentation
21Stages of Memory
0
22You witnessed an accident
0
- How fast were the cars going when they smashed
into each other? - Was there any damage? If so, describe it?
23You witnessed an accident
0
- Estimate, in miles per hour, the rate at which
the cars moving when they bumped into each other?
24Recall affected by context
0
- Questions can serve as the context for
information recall - e.g., How fast were the cars going? vs. estimate
in miles per hour the rate they traveled? - As time passes, memory integrity decreases
- Confabulate contextual information with actual
memory (disruption at the level of retrieval)
25Encoding Failures
0
- Garbage in, Garbage out
- We ignore or distort most information we are
presented
26Memory types
0
- Effort of recall
- Implicit recollection occurs without knowledge
(e.g., write name slowly) - Explicit effortful recall (e.g., previous phone
) - Information type
- Declarative facts (easy to learn forget)
- Procedural a skill (harder to learn forget
e.g., finger movements for dialing your phone) - Some well rehearsed declarative info can become
procedural
27Memory stores
- Sensory register
- very large capacity
- iconic (1-3s), echoic (3s)
- short duration
- lost unless rehearsed
- Use of errors in recall to determine how info is
stored (visually, semantically, etc.)
- Short term Memory
- limited capacity
- chunking into meaningful groups (chess study)
- no limit on chunk sizes
- 7 /- 2
- Long Term Memory
- limitless capacity and long lasting
- Semantic encoding
28Herman Ebbinghaus (late 1800s)
- 1) amount remembered depends on time spent
learning - 2) when recalling lists, 1st (primacy effect) and
most recent or last (recency effect) things are
recalled best. This is the serial position
effect. - Change order of info to improve recall. Advantage
of going 1st or last in job interviews. - Most info lost in the first 1-2 days, then a
gradual slope for forgetting
29Forgetting
- Decay as time passes, we lose info. Faster rate
of forgetting when awake (assuming no rehearsal) - Interference new info interferes with old
- 1. Retroactive info occurring afterwards
interferes - 2. Proactive previous info interferes with new
info - Sleeper effect forget messenger but recall the
message (increases message salience when
messenger was poor source)
30Amnesia
- Results from injury, stressor, or toxicity
- Anterograde cant recall info after injury
- Retrograde cant recall anything prior to
injury - Episodic amnesia a specified period of time
- Generally affects declarative, but not procedural
memories - Psychogenic fugue state (memory loss flight)
- Alzheimers dementia (degraded short term new
memories)
31Sleep
- Approx. a 24.3 hour cycle for circadian rhythms,
but synchronized to external cues to stay on 24
hr cycle (called entrainment) - At birth 17hrs/day 6 mos. 13hrs 5-7 yrs
adopt adult pattern of 7-9 hrs - 4.5 10.5 hrs per day for most people
- Outside this range results in shorter life span
- Sleep deprivation results in abnormal experiences
and can even result in death - Internal desynchronization can occur when
changing time zones, taking sleep medications, or
even as a consequence of depression
32Sleep stages (approx 90 min cycle)
- Stage 1 relaxed transitional sleep
- Stage 2, 3, 4 move from relatively fewer alpha
waves to more delta waves - REM most dreaming occurs, restorative sleep,
improves memory, approx. 50 of babies sleep
time, occurs after about 1 hour, paradoxical
sleep, REM rebound, essential to survival. - Sleep medications and alcohol can reduce REM
sleep, but increase overall sleep time. - Lack of sleep can result in delusions and
hallucinations after 2-3 days
33Sleep disorders
- Narcolepsy (sleep attacks)
- Sleep apnea (stop breathing)
- Night terrors (intense nightmares in children in
stage 4 sleep) - Insomnia (note people generally underestimate
how much they sleep) - Improve sleep by using bed only for sleeping and
only when tired
34Altered states of consciousness
- Hypnosis a heightened state of suggestibility
(Mesmer) - Used in clinical settings to facilitate memory
recall, treat disorders such as phobias, reduce
or eliminate problematic behaviors (e.g.,
smoking, over eating, etc.), and even create
experiences such as age regression, past life
channeling, etc. - Limited empirical support for effectiveness in
reducing smoking, stress, pain. - Known facts Its not sleep effectiveness is
determined by subject not the skill of the
hypnotist, cant do things against your will
motivated un-hypnotized people can do the same
things and it does not improve memory accuracy. - Dissociative theory (Hilgard) vs. social
cognitive theory (Spanos Kirsch Lynn).
35Classes of Drugs
- Stimulants CNS activators e.g., cocaine,
nicotine, caffeine, amphetamines, etc. - Depressants CNS suppression e.g., alcohol,
sedatives, Xanax, etc - Hallucinogens altered states of consciousness
e.g., LSD, mescaline, Hashish, PCP - Narcotics numbness and stupor (pain relief)
e.g., opium, morphine, heroin, codeine, Demerol,
Darvon, etc.
36Regular use of drugs/alcohol
- Leads to tolerance it takes more of the drug to
have the same physiological effect - Tolerance is one of the criteria of substance
dependence (as are withdrawal symptoms) - Reverse tolerance it takes less of the drug to
achieve the same physiological effect - Cross tolerance use of some substances can
result in tolerance for similar substances - Substance abuse use problem behaviors
- Substance dependence tolerance, withdrawal
- Substance-induced psychiatric disorders (e.g.,
mood, psychotic, etc.)
37Expectancy effects and treatment
- Expectancy effects stronger than the
pharmacological properties of some drugs when in
low to moderate doses - e.g., alcohol experienced as a stimulant and
nicotine experienced as a depressant - Studies in Barlab expectancy with no alcohol
results in greater intoxication than low to
moderate alcohol without expectancy. - Treatment begins with abstinence and may move to
controlled use if it is a legal substance - In NA, AA (12 steps) is the most common
- In UK controlled drinking is most common (gt
success) - Controlled drinking after abstinence, change
gulping to sipping, reduce frequency, and no
straight drinks
38Exam is Wed Dec. 8 at 7pm
- Enjoy your holiday and good luck on finals!