Psychological Disorders

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Psychological Disorders Chapter 12 Pages 483-521

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Psychological Disorders. Chapter 12 Pages 483-521. Psychopathology. In other words mental disorder or mental illness According to the National Institutes of Mental Health 15.4% of the population suffers from a diagnosable mental health problems - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Psychological Disorders

Page 1: Psychological Disorders

Psychological Disorders

Chapter 12Pages 483-521

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Psychopathology• In other words mental disorder or mental

illness• According to the National Institutes of

Mental Health 15.4% of the population suffers from a diagnosable mental health problems

• Another study found that the behaviors of over 56 million Americans meet the criteria for a diagnosable psychological disorder

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Changing Concepts of Psychological Disorder

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Different Perspectives: Demonological

• The view that abnormal behavior reflect invasion by evil spirits or demons.

• Stone Age humans developed trephining- the practice of putting holes in the skull to provide a passage for demons to get out of the head

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• Trephining actually worked- today most would agree b/c people were so afraid they conformed to society.

• Ancient Greeks believed gods punished people by causing confusion and madness except Hippocrates (said Abnormal Behavior caused by something in brain)

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• Massachusetts- Many believed ab. Behavior was caused by possession of devil-called these people witches( held responsible for many things ranging from a neighbor’s infertility to a poor yield of crops).

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Cures

• An exorcist would pray for you and wave a cross over you at night to send the devil elsewhere…if that didn’t work you were beaten, killed

• In Europe over 200,000 “witches” were killed due to a publishing of manual of how to recognize a witch.

• Salem witch trials

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Witch testing

• Water-float test• (pure metals sink to the bottom, impurities

float to surface) suspects who sank were considered pure, those who kept their heads above water were impure.

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Historical Roots

• 400 B.C.- Hippocrates declared abnormal behavior had physical causes.

• He taught symptoms of mental disorders were a result of an imbalance among bodily fluids (called humors)

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The Four HumorsHumors Origin Temperament

Blood Heart Sanguine (cheerful)

Choler (yellow bile)

Liver Choleric (angry)

Melancholer (black bile)

Spleen Melancholy (depressed)

Phlegm Brain Phlegmatic (sluggish)

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Middle Ages

• Superstition eclipsed Hippocrates ideas• Under the influence of the church,

physicians and clergy reverted back to blaming abnormal behavior on demons, witches, and the devil.

• The cure: torture, trephining, execution

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The Medical Model

• Ab. Behavior is symptomatic of an underlying illness.

• 2 version of model *biological *psychodynamic

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The medical model

• Reemerged (from Hippocrates ideas) in the late 18th century

• Diseases of the mind are like any other disease

• Mental diseases have specific causes and therefore must have specific treatments

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How did this change view of mental illnesses?

• Torture, executions, etc.. No longer made sense

• Implemented asylums for the insane-initially very therapeutic, later became overcrowded and used as human storehouses

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Biological Version

• Ab. behavior reflects biological or biochemical problems

• Term- mental illness• Today- abnormalities in neurotransmitters,

the chemical that “conduct’ messages from one cell in the nervous system to another.

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• Syndrome- a cluster or group of symptoms suggestive of a particular order.

• Each mental illness presumably has specific outcome and response to appropriate therapy.

• DNA

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• Major advance over demonological perspective—compassion over hatred

• Problem- mental hospital not always best “cure”

• Today- receive treatment while staying in society

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Psychodynamic (Freud)Version

• Neuroses(neurotic behavior)- groups of disorders theorized to stem from unconscious conflict

• Abnormal behavior is a symptom of unconscious childhood conflict

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• Psychosis- major disorder in which a person lacks insight and has difficulty meeting the demands of daily life and maintaining contact with reality.

• Cure- resolve unconscious conflicts

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Criticism of the medical approach

• Too much reliance on doctor• Patients became too passive/dependent on

doctor and/or drug treatments• Little encouragement for the patient to take

part in ‘getting better”

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Learning Perspectives

• Ab. Behavior may be caused by the fact that one never got the chance to observe “normal” behaviors and interactions.

• Inconsistent punishments• Subculture reinforces behavior that is not

accepted by majority of population.

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The Cognitive Perspective

• Ab. behavior caused by disturbances in how one inputs, stores,manipulates, and retrieves info.

• Disturbances caused by blocking input, faulty storage, retrieval, or manipulation

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Social-Cognitive-Behavioral Perspective

• The alternative to the medical model that view psychological disorders as a combination of the social, cognitive, and behavioral perspective.