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PSYC3102 Lecture 3 with correct answers

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What are some points in history of Schizophrenia? 1. Emil Kraeplim categorized it as Dementia Praecox. 2. Eugene Bleuler (1911) called it Schizophrenia with four core disturbances: Affect, Ambivalence, Associations, Preference for Fantasy over reality. What are two myths about people with Schizophrenia? 1. They're dangerous. 2. The have split personalities. What are the prognostic and prevalence factors of Schizophrenia? 1. Approximately 1% prevalence in population. 2. Peak age onset is: Male: 15-25 Female: 25-35 Onset before 10 or after 50 is rare. Men are 30-40% more likely to develop it. Approximately 50% of all patients attempt suicide and 10% will be successful. Why are people with Schizophrenia found more frequently in the low SES category? Because: 1. It is the most expensive disorder. 2. There is more socioeconomic disadvantage to people with mental illness e.g. inability to keep jobs (conditional)... Who is Dr Frese? 1. He had severe classic symptoms including psychosis and paranoia. 2. Managed to get qualified as a clinical psychologist. Who is John Nash? 1. Mathematical Genius diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. 2. Was awarded Nobel Prize in economics. What are the characteristic symptoms (according to the DSM-5 criteria) of Schizophrenia? 1. Delusions 2. Hallucinations 3. Disorganised speech 4. Grossly disorganised or catatonic behaviour 5. Negative symptoms including: Affect flattening Alogia: loss of speech processes that are normally there but now aren't. Avolition: loss of motivation. First four are positive symptoms: meaning adding something, something that wouldn't normally be there. What are the B, C, D, E and F criteria? B. Social/Occupational functioning. C. Duration: continuous signs for 6 months. D. Symptoms aren't better explained by another Schizoaffective or Mood disorder. E. Symptoms are caused by Substance/general medical condition. F. No relation to autism spectrum disorder or a communication disorder. What are some disturbances in content of thought (delusions)? 1. Persecution (people coming to get you) 2. Reference (things only happen to you) 3. Grandeur (you're the best) Some others: Delusions of sin, Hypochondriacal, Nihilistic, Somatic Passivity, Thought insertion, Thought broadcasting, "Made" feelings and impulses, Capgras Syndrome, Cotards Syndrome. What are some disturbances in form of thought (delusions)? Disturbances in production and organisation of thought revealed by peculiarities in verbal expression. 1. Loosening of associations (Cannot talk in a cohesive way, cannot associate). 2. Neologism (made up words) 3. Perseveration (Repetition and difficulty engaging in cognitive set) 4. Word salad (jumbled language) 5. Circumstantiality (no flow of conversation) 6. Tangentiality (never getting back to the point) What are some disturbances of perception (hallucinations)? Hallucinations make people percept like experience occurring in the absence if appropriate stimulus and not under voluntary control. 1. Auditory 2. Visual 3. Olfactory 4. Gustatory 5. Tactile What are some disturbances in affect? 1. Can't show outward expressivity. 2. Restricted affect 3. Blunted affect 4. Flat affect What are some disturbances in Psychomotor Behaviour? CATATONIA 1. Catatonic stupor: extreme psychomotor slowing. Showing negativism, don't want to do anything. 2. Catatonic rigidity: rigid in an unusual position. Can't move from the position unless having waxiflexibility: you can move the position you're in and stay rigid in the new position. What are the 9 Schizophrenia specifiers used after one year? 1. Three first episode specifiers: in acute, partial or full remission. 2. Three multiple episode specifiers: in acute, partial or full remission. 3. Continuous. 4. Unspecified: people diagnosed but don't full into one category. 5. With catatonia: marked psychomotor disturbance which may involve stupor, rigidity, excitement or posturing. Rated on a 5 point scale for the past seven days, on the 5 core characteristics of delusions, hallucinations, disorganised speech, disorganised or catatonic behaviour, negative symptoms e.g. affect, avolition, alogia. What is the different between type one and type two Schizophrenia? Type 1: Sudden onset, Normal intellect, No brain damage, No negative symptoms, Good drug response. Type 2: Slower onset, intellectual deterioration, brain abnormality, prominent negative symptoms, poor drug response. Doesn't help to use these in clinical setting as people normally show signs of both. What are the three episode in a course of Schizophrenia? 1. Prodromal phase: precedes the diagnosis, normally see a slower onset, diagnosis is given when behaviours can't be seen as normal anymore. 2. Active phase: operating in a way that doesn't aline with reality. 3. Residual phase: able to function again but still with odd behaviors. What is the prognosis of Schizophrenia? 1. 20-30% are able to lead "normal lives" 2. 20-30% experience moderate symptoms 3. 40-60% remain significantly impaired. What some characteristics of good and bad longterm prognosis'? Good: Good premorbid adjustment, no family history, sudden onset, precipitating stress, good response to medication, positive symptoms, later age of onset, female. Bad: poor premorbid adjustment, family history, slow onset, no precipitating stress, poor response to medication, negative symptoms, early age on onset, male. What are four other psychotic disorders? 1. Schizophreniform disorder: duration at least one month but less than 6, impaired social function not required. Other than that same as schizophrenia just shorter. 2. Schizoaffective disorder: symptoms fall on the boundary between schizophrenia and mood disorders. Prominent episode of mood disturbance concurrent with criterion A schizophrenia symptoms. Delusions and hallucinations for at least 2 weeks in absence of prominent mood disturbance. 3. Delusional disorder: one or more delusions and never met criterion A schizophrenia. 4. Brief psychotic disorder: Sudden onset of at least one; delusions, hallucinations, disorganised speech, disorganised catatonic behaviour. Lasts at least one day but less than a month and full return to premorbid functioning. According to genes, what is a characteristic of schizophrenia? Most likely polygenetic: no one single gene linked. MZ twins have a 48% concordance. Offspring have 46% concordance with parents. What is the dopamine hypothesis? What is the course of fixing this? Too much dopamine causes psychotic activity. Schizophrenia, Disordered thoughts and behaviour, given a neuroleptic drug which decreases dopamine, and calms thoughts and behaviours. BUT CAUSES STIFFNESS AND TREMORS (LIKE PARKINSONS) BECAUSE NOT ENOUGH DOPAMINE, GIVEN L-DOPA? BUT THIS CAUSES PSYCHOSIS. What are some structural brain changes in schizophrenia? 1. Enlarged brain ventricles. (suggests it not a purely genetic disease). 2. Decreased frontal, temporal, and whole brain volume. 3. Volumetric differences in twins discordant for schizophrenia. Bare et al. 4. Reduced action in frontal regions. What are three complications in foetal neurodevelopment that can cause schizophrenia? 1. Obstetrical complications: labour and delivery problems. 2. Maternal infection: 'season of birth' effect. Born in flue season? Flu can cause schizo. 3. Maternal stress: Maternal stress hormones can interfere with foetal development. What is one things that can cause schizophrenia postnatally? 1. Head injuries before the age of 10. What are four limitations of the biological view? 1. A biological abnormality is at most a correlation. 2. Difficult to determine whether the abnormality is related to the disease process or to treatment. 3. Pathology identified in one area of the brain does not mean that the primary area of pathology has been defined. 4. A single pathological process in the brain can cause a wide range of phenomena in different individuals. What is the behavioural view on the development of schizophrenia (psychoanalytic theory)? 1. Failure to attend to relevant social cues results in bizarre responses to environments 2. Acquisition of bizarre behaviours through operant conditioning 3. Unable to fully account for the origins of the various symptoms of schizophrenia. What are 5 theoretical frameworks focused on family views on the development of schizophrenia? 1. Schizophrenogenic mother: mothers fault, mother warm and cold to the child. 2. Double-blind communication: Two different emotions shown from the mother at the same time. 3. Family structure. 4. Communication deviance: abnormal patterns of communicating in families. 5. Expressed emotion. What is the expressed emotion theory? Family stress=expressed emotion. e.g. Three key emotions: criticism, hostility, emotional over-involvement. Family stress may precipitate relapses. People with schizophrenia are 3.7 more likely to relapse in a HIGH EE environment than in a LOW EE environment. What did family burden studies show? FAMILY STRESS ARE RECIPROCAL. FAMILY IS STRESSED BECAUSE OF THE SCHIZOPHRENIC PERSON, SCHIZOPHRENIA PERSON WORSE BECAUSE OF FAMILY STRESS. Families go through, emotional loss, family conflict, say they need more information, guidance and community resources. They also feel burden of blame, where the health professional was blaming them for their person diagnosis. SHOWED THAT WE NEED TO INVOLVE THE FAMILY IN A PROACTIVE WAY. What are the limitations of the family views? 1. Earlier views were not based on empirical evidence. 2. Many of the findings are correlational. 3. These family patterns also occur in families of patients with other disorders. 4. Reciprocal relationship between patient and family members not taken into account. 5. The impact of living with a family member with schizophrenia is neglected. What is the diathesis stress model? Prior effects such as genes or trauma, or brain abs, or psychosis prone personality, flairs up in the environment that is stressful and this turns into a disorder. What are three psychosocial interventions? 1. CBT: coping mechanisms, social skills training. 2. Broad rehabilitation approach: focuses on broader practical difficulties. 3. Family interventions: supplementing drug treatment with family intervention reduces relapse. What are some somatic treatments? 1. Anti-psychotics (neuroleptics): positive symptoms respond better than negative symptoms, 25% don't improve. What is a multifaceted treatment approach? 1. The community approach: deinstitutionalisation. Effective community care: coordinated services, short-term hospitalisation, partial hospitalisation, community houses/half-way houses and ADVOCACY. Add or remove terms You can also click the terms or definitions to blur or reveal them Review with an activity

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APSYC3102 Final Exam with correct
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bnormal Psychology - answersStudy of behaviour with the objectives of
1. describing
2. explaining
3. predicting
4. controlling behaviours that considered strange and unusual

Relativists - answerssymptoms and causes of a disorder vary across culutres

Absolutists - answersdisorder is caused by the same biological factors in all cultures

Abnormality definition - answers1.no clear-cut definitions

Abnormal behaviour - answersdeviant, dangerous or dysfunctional

Abnormal behaviour consequences - answersdistress or dysfunction for individual or
others

Elements of Abnormality - answers-personal suffering
-maladaptiveness
-irrationality and incomprehensibility
-unpredictability and loss of control
-level of emotional distress
-interference in daily functioning
-vividness and unconventionality (deviations from the normal (Developmetal, societal
and culturals)
-observer discomfort
-violation of moral and ideal standards

Defining Abnoraml behaviour - answersDSM-5
Diagnostic and statistical manuel for mental disorders

DSM-5 - answerssymptoms and the scientific basis for the disorder
-presentation
-aetiology
-developmental stage
-functional impairment

Clinical presentation - answerssymtoms clustered together

etiology - answerscause of the disorder

,developmental stage - answersdoes disorder look different between children and adults

functional impairment - answersimmediate and long term consequences

Mental disorders - answers-present distress
-disability (impairment)
-risk of suffering death/pain/loss of freedom/disability

Thomas Szasz- Clinical labelling misue - answersmental illness=problems in living

Mental Health Professionals - answers1. Psychiatrists
2. clincial psychologist
3. psychoanalyst
4. psychotherapist
5. counselling psychologist

Epidemiology - answersthe study of the frequency and distribution of disorders within a
population

incidence - answersnumber of new cases of a diorder taht appear in a population within
a pseicfic time period

prevalence - answerstotal number of active cases in a given population during specific
period of time

life-time prevalence - answersproportion of people in a given population affected by the
disorder at some point during their lives e.g. depression 17%

comorbidity - answersthe presence of more than one condition at a time

Australians/qld that suffer mental disorders in their lifetime - answers1/4

How many qlders suffer mental disorders that significantly interfere with their daily lives
- answers1/2 million

How many australians attempt suicide everyday? - answers100

How many australians committed suicide in 2010? - answers2, 361
77% men
35.44 years highest suicide rates

highest to lowest lifetime prevalence - answersmajor depression, alcohol abuse, drug
abuse, post traumatic stress disorder, panic disorder, bipolar mood isorder, ocd,
schizophrenia, bulimia nervosa, anorexia nervosa

,How did the ancient world explain mental disorders? (Exl greece) - answerssupernatural
explanations

Hippocrates (5th BC, greece) 3 categories of mental disorders? - answers1. Mania
2. Melancholia
3. Phrenitis or brain-fever

Hipporcrates explanation of mental disorder? - answersnatural causes: an imbalance in
the four essential fluids
1. blood
2. phlegm
3. yellow
4. black bile
(couldn't find evidence after the romance empire fell in 1st century)

Middle age explanation of mental disorder? - answersreligion domination- supernatural
view

Supernatural view of mental disorders - answersabnormal behaviour were works of the
devil/witchcraft (exorcisms)
-persecution as witches

Renaissance delt with mental disorders how? - answershumane treatment of mentally ill

Pacacelsus - answersstarts and planents affected the brain

Weyer - answers1st physician to treat mental illness

Asylums - answersmid 16h c
e.g London's bethlehem hospital
Treatment
-confinement (shackles/chains/isolation)
-torturous practices
(ice baths, spin chairs, retricted diets)
-medical treatments
(bloodletting, purgatives)

Moral treatment - answers19th century
-american/french revolutions->individual rights
-humantarian
-care of people

Philippe Pinel's reforms - answersreforms in the care of people with mental disorders

Pinel's Classification System (late 19th c) - answers-melancholia
-mania

, -mania with delirium
-dementia
-idiotism

Kraepelin and the German Classifiers (1920s) - answers1. dementia praecox
2. manic depressive psychosis

Dementia praecox - answersbleuler subsequently renamed it schizophrenia

what did syphilis cause? - answersa search for biological causes

Who identified hysterical disorders? - answersFranz Mesmer

How were Franz Mesmer hysterical disorders treated? - answersHypnosis

Freud and Jean Martin Charcot - answers

Joseph Breuer: catharsis - answers

Freud- Free assocation - answers

Frued and Breurer's study in hysteria (1895) (a psychoanalytic revolution) - answers1.
psychological factors affect behaviour
2. talking treatment more effective than harsh physical and moral treatments
3. behaviour influenced by thoughts, impulses and wishes (unaware of)
4. non-psychotic disorders are worthy of treatment

Biopsychosocial Framework (Adolf Meyer 1866-1950) - answers-Biological factors
(biology/disease processes/genes)
-Psychological factors (thoughts/feelings/perceptions)
-social factors (relationships/support)
-Environmental factors (characteristics of seetings)

Problems with single models for explaining abnormal behaviour - answers1. individuals
are all unique, hard to explain the presence of the behaviour
2. many different factors contribute to the illness as a whole (systemic approach)

Diathesis-stress model - answersexamines biological, psychological, social, and cultural
factors related to abnormal behaviour

Advances in Treatment - answers1. Psychoanalytic technique
2. Psychological theories (behavioural/humanistic)
3. new psychotropic drugs
4. deinstitutionalisation
5. out-patient psychiatric clinics
6. community mental health centres

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Escrito en
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