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Affective and Somatoform Disorders Psychology - Full Module Lecture Notes

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Affective and Somatoform Disorders Psychology - Full Module Lecture Notes

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January 24, 2021
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2017/2018
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Affective and Somatoform Disorders

Week 1 – Osamu

Models of Affective Disorders

Different models of affective disorders:

 Biomedical
 Psychological
 Social
 Interaction, biopsychosocial

Demonic Possession Model – Davey (2015):

 Demonology survived as an explanation of psychopathology until the 18th
century.
 Those exhibiting symptoms of psychopathology were possessed by bad
spirits.
 The only way to remove bad spirits was with ritualized ceremonies
 Many who have been suffering debilitating and distressing psychological
problems have been persecuted and physically abused.
 In 21st century, what do we do to remove the spirits?
o Little buddhas and toy windmills??
 Why do we still rely on spiritual healings?
o Bad things randomly happen but you want to know why it happens
to you.
o Widely available more so than psychotherapies
o Often cheaper than psychotherapies

, o Often develop social networking
o Spiritual healings have many similarities to psychotherapies
 Meeting an experienced therapist provides relief from the
distress.
 Drawing on relevant models, the therapist identifies the cause
of the problem (individualised case formulation)
 Provide ways to deal with uncertainty (e.g. chanting)
 One “spiritual organisation” conducted a RCT using a spiritual
therapy for depression. Demonstrated that their therapy is
effective and changes brain activity.
 Bekelman et al. (2007): Examined spiritual well-being and
depression in patients with heart failure. Self-report measures
of spiritual well-being and depression. Found that among
outpatients with heart failure, greater spiritual well-being,
particularly meaning and peace, was strongly associated with
less depression. Enhancement of patients’ sense of spiritual
well-being might reduce or prevent depression and thus
improve quality of life and other outcomes in this population.




Other 3 models of affective disorders:

,Endogenous model of depression:

 Endogenous depression is when depression occurs due to the presence of
an internal (cognitive, biological) stressor instead of an external
(environmental) stressor.
 Includes patients with treatment-resistant, non-psychotic, MDD,
characterised by abnormal behaviour of the endogenous opioid system but
not the monoaminergic system.
 Since symptoms are due to a biological phenomenon, prevalence rates tend
to be higher in older adults (Watts, 1956) and so biological-focused
treatment plans are often used in therapy to ensure the best prognosis.

Stress-diathesis model:

 In contrast to the biopsychosocial model, which describes the
interdependence of depression causes, the diathesis-stress model talks
about the relationship between potential causes of depression, and the
degree to which people may be vulnerable to react to those causes.

,  The model suggests that people have, to different degrees, vulnerabilities
or predispositions for developing depression.
 These vulnerabilities are referred to as diatheses and include both
biological and psychological factors.
 Some people may have more of these diatheses for developing depression
than other people. However, this model suggests that having a propensity
towards developing depression alone is not enough to trigger the illness.
Instead, an individual's diathesis must interact with stressful life events (of
a social, psychological or biological nature) in order to prompt the onset of
the illness.
 According to both the Biopsychosocial Model and the Diathesis-Stress
Theory, Unipolar Depression is caused by numerous psychological, social,
and biological factors that interact with one another, and with a given
individual's unique vulnerabilities.
 Depression is thus a very complex sort of condition that really demands to
be thought about in a holistic manner. Since no one factor causes
depression, it is probably unreasonable to expect that only one type of
treatment can fix the problem.

Development of depression by external/social factors

Stressful life events and depression:

 How much are disorders like depression and anxiety the result of nature or
nurture?
 Can we find higher levels of significant stressors prior to onset of
depression in depressed samples compared to healthy controls?

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