Abnormality Flashcards

1
Q

Deviation from social norms (3)

A

Behaviour doesn’t follow accepted social patterns or rules - violation seen as abnormal and unacceptable - example - vary between culture and time - collective judgements made by society - explicit like laws or implicit like social morals

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2
Q

Social norms eval

A
  • Some people have naturally odd behaviour but not mentally ill, and some infractions are not to be worried about - e.g speeding
  • Context required
    + Distinguishes normal vs abnormal so helps identify and minimise abnormal or dangerous behaviour
  • Cultural and time based
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3
Q

Failure to function adequately

A

Unable to deal with demands of everyday life - assessed via global assessment of functioning scale (GAF) and 7 SUMOVIV criteria

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4
Q

SUMOVIV criteria

A

Suffering, Unpredictability and loss of control,Maladaptiveness, Observer discomfort, Vividness and unconventionality, Irrationality, Violation of moral and ideal standards

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5
Q

Failure to function eval

A
  • People without those features could still function adequately e.g Ted Bundy
  • Subjective - difficult to measure - not objective or scientific
  • Sometimes normal to be e.g suffering or personal distress e.g grieving
    + recognises patients own perspective and mental health - help diagnosis
    + GAF to assess degree of abnormality - could be linked to objective values like school attendance/ grades
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6
Q

Statistical infrequency

A

Behaviour that is numerically uncommon - plot a normal distribution curve - both extremes are uncommon so abnormal - e.g scores above 130 or below 70 - relies on up to date data

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7
Q

Statistical infrequency eval

A

+ Some abnormality can be good e.g genius IQ so not all negative, maybe desirable
+ Objective and scientific data so easy to link to help requirements e.g cognitive disability
- Unviable with hard to collect or outdated data
- Involves labelling which affects self esteem and problematic - could also cause others to look at them negatively
- Subjective cutoff points required e.g IQ 70 and 71 - who/ how decides?
- Not satisfactory on its own - maybe pair with failure to function as a holistic definition

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8
Q

Deviation from ideal mental health

A

Derived from humanist approach - motivation for self development - Jahoda wanted 6 criteria for positive mental health and if you dont meet it you are abnormal - because normal people should strive to better themselves - self actualisation

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9
Q

APPIES criteria

A

Autonomy, Perception of reality, Personal growth, Integration( resistance to stress), Environmental mastery, Self attitude

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10
Q

Ideal mental health eval

A

+ Positive and productive as it focuses on positive criteria - therapeutic goal to achieve
+ Highlight areas of disfunction to focus on - e.g lack of self attitudes links to depression
- Problematic and subjective - how much of each criteria is healthy
- Sometimes lacking a criteria would be normal e.g low self esteem after a breakup
-Cultural bias e.g autonomy is seen as less important in Eastern collectivist cultures

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