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Summary of Lecture Content for the Course Forensic Diagnostics and Treatment

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This document includes extensive information and explanations of the content covered in the lectures. It does not cover the readings, although there is a substantial overlap between the readings and the Lecture content. The Lecture Slides are summarised into questions, so you can use it for flashcards or immediately start studying and checking your knowledge!

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Lecture Summaries: Forensic Diagnostics and Treatment



Lecture 1: Psychosis

1. What is the Forensic Mental Health Assessment (FMHA)?
How does it differ from a regular assessment?
o The goal of the assessment is the examination and presentation
of professional opinion with the highest possible psychological
certainty
o The three main questions we try to answer during the
assessment:
o 1. Competence to stand trail (or to even be interviewed)
o 2. Criminal Responsibility (establishing causality in a
forensic setting: did the disorder precede the criminal
offending; do they covary; is there no other plausible third-
variable explanation)
o 3. Other Claims
 Personal Injury
 Child Custody

2. What is tested as part of the FMHA?
o Cognitive Function:
o WAIS-IV (critical thinking, intelligence, impulse control)
o Neuropsychological Screening
o Korsakoff (memory loss and confabulation, assessed with
blood tests, MRIs…)
o Neuropsychological Dysfunction
 Bourdon-Wiersma (used to assess a person's
concentration and vigilance)
 Trail making Test (measures visual attention,
processing speed, and cognitive flexibility by
having participants connect a series of encircled
numbers and letters)
o Personality
o Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventoy-2 (MMPI-RF)
o Personality Assessment Inventory (PAI)
o PCL-R
o HEXACO, Big-5
o Trauma Testing
o PTSD Checklist from the DSM-5 (PCL-5)
o Trauma Symptom Inventory (TSI-2)
o Specific Forensic Tests

,2

o Violence Risk Assessment
o Malingering
 SIMS: screens for exaggerated or feigned
psychiatric and cognitive symptoms
 MENT (Memory and Effort Test): assessing memory
performance and effort to detect possible
insufficient effort or malingering
 TOMM (Test of Memory Malingering): A visual
recognition memory test designed to detect
feigned memory impairment
 MATE (Malingering Assessment Test of Executive
Functioning / MATE-EF): A test assessing executive
functioning with indicators for detecting
exaggerated or feigned cognitive deficits
o Criminal Responsibility (Rogers Criminal Responsibility
Assessment Scale (RCRAS))

3. What are the 6 Steps in Forensic Diagnostics?
o (1) Rule out Malingering/Factitious Disorder
o (2) Rule out Substance Aetiology
o (3) Rule out disorder due to medical condition
o (4) Determine specific primary disorders
o (5) Differentiating adjustment disorders from the residual other
(un) specified disorders)
o (6) Establish the boundary with no mental disorder (you must
clearly determine whether the person actually has a mental
disorder or whether their symptoms fall within the range of
normal behaviour)



4. How do you conduct Symptom Validity Assessments (SVA’s)?
Why is it important for forensic psychologist?
o Performance Validity Tests (PVTs):
o Structured tests that evaluate whether cognitive test
performance (memory, attention, executive function) is
credible.
Examples: TOMM, MENT, WMT, MSVT
o Symptom Validity Tests (SVTs)
o Questionnaires assessing whether reported
psychological symptoms are plausible or exaggerated.
Examples: SIMS, SIRS, M-FAST
o Consistency Checks & Behavioural Observation

,3

o compare test results with medical records, collateral
information, and real-world functioning
o Check for inconsistencies (e.g., severe reported memory
problems but intact functioning in daily life)
o Examine behaviour during the assessment (e.g.,
inconsistent effort, over-dramatized symptoms)

5. What are the statistics on Psychosis? What are common
myths?
o Only around 11% of homicide convictions in the UK were
mental health patients (and that can be ANY disorder, not
alone psychosis)
o Victim is most likely to be an acquaintance and less likely to be
unknown to the perpetrator than for homicides by non-patients
o Most patients had a history of alcohol or drug misuse;
homicide in the absence of comorbid substance misuse is
unusual
o Around half of patients were not receiving care as intended,
wither through loss of contact or non-adherence with drug
treatment
o Patients are also at high risk of being victims of homicide
o Psychotic disorders increased risk of violence from 49% to 68%
(modest risk factor)
o Substance abuse comorbidity plays an important role in
violence
o Although a significant risk factor, it only explains between 5-
40% of violent behaviour
o Social disorganization is high risk factor (e.g. being homeless,
drug-abuse, bad social circle…)
o Psychosis and violence are more weakly correlated in clinical,
than in community samples!



6. Subtypes of Schizophrenia
o (1) Schizophrenia
o ≥6 months (with ≥1 month active symptoms)
o Core symptoms:
 Delusions
 Hallucinations
 Disorganized Speech
 Grossly disorganized or catatonic behaviour
 Negative symptoms (flat affect, avolition, alogia,
anhedonia)

, 4

o Functioning: Significant decline in work, relationships, or
self-care
o Course: Chronic, often episodic; cognitive impairment
common
o (2) Schizophreniform Disorder
o 1–6 months
o Symptoms: Same symptom set as schizophrenia
o Difference: Functional decline may be absent or less
pronounced
o Outcome: ~⅓ recover fully; ~⅔ progress to
schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder
o (3) Brief Psychotic Disorder
o Duration: 1 day–<1 month
o Symptoms
 Sudden onset of one or more of: delusions,
hallucinations, disorganized speech, or
disorganized/catatonic behavior
 Full return to premorbid functioning
o Triggers: Often stress-related (e.g., trauma, childbirth →
brief psychotic disorder postpartum)
o (4) Schizoaffective Disorder
o A major mood episode (depressive or manic)
o PLUS ≥2 weeks of psychosis with no mood
symptoms (this is the key feature!)
o Other periods have both psychosis and mood symptoms
together
o Course: More mood-driven than schizophrenia; better
functioning overall
o (5) Delusional Disorder
o One or more delusions for ≥1 month
o No other prominent psychotic symptoms
o Functioning typically intact; behaviour not obviously
bizarre
o Types:
 Persecutory (Verfolungswahn)
 Erotomaniac
 Grandiose
 Jealous
 Somatic
 Mixed
o Hallucinations: If present, are mild and related to
delusion (e.g., smelling “worms” in somatic delusion)
o (6) Substance/Medication induced Psychotic Disorder
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