Ch 8 Flashcards

1
Q

Mental illness

A
  • Defined as alterations on thinking, mood, of behaviour that are associated with significant distress and impaired functioning
  • consists of two commissions:
    → individual: the experience of an illness
    → social: the perceptions/treatment of those with an illness
  • reflects a process of social construction
  • prevalence: in Canada 20% of adults have a mental disorder; 80% of adults know someone with a mental disorder (half of all Canadians will experience a mental disorder by the age of 40)
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2
Q

Patterns of mental illness

A
  • Greatest predictor of mental illness is socioeconomic status
  • social causation hypothesis: more life stressors and fewer resources to cope with those stressors contributes to the development of mental illness (is a product of one’s social position)
    → between adulthood and old age social causation plays a bigger role
    → mood and anxiety disorders are best explained by social causation
  • social selection hypothesis: because of their mental illnesses, people experience challenges maintaining their socioeconomic position; social drift is when people drift into a lower socioeconomic position
    → ADHD, conduct disorder, and schizophrenia are best explained by social selection
  • adolescents and young adults have higher rates of mental illness and major disorders emerge during this period (biological, psychological, social factors, marginalized youth)
  • sex differences:
    → men: antisocial personality disorder and conduct disorders more common in men
    → women: mooin and andrett diserciers more common in women
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3
Q

Costs of mental illness

A
  • Individuals and families
    → lower levels of educational opportunities, employment rates, and income
    → contributes to family instability given the challenges and stresses of mental illness
    → physical illness (links between certain diseases, less likely to comply with treatment)
  • society
    → health care expenses
    → lowered productivity at work it dealing with mental illness
    → lost tax revenues if people are unable to maintain employment
  • treatment issues
    → many remain untreated due to lack of services, belief that services are inadequate, stigmatization uncomfortable with self-disclosure
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4
Q

Controlling mental illness

A
  • Stigmatization: assuming people with mental illness are unpredictable, unstable, and dangerous (damaging beliefs about mental illness and those who have them)
    → self-stigmatization: people with mental illness stigmatize themselves without having to experience external stigma (buying into harmful, inaccurate ideas)
  • medicalization: process by which more areas of human life get framed as medical issues (moral failing, criminal act, mental illness)
    → began with asylums but today it involves an extensive array of treatment options
    → issues of de institutionalizations: lack of treatment, worsening mental/physical health, lack of social support, stigmatization/discrimination, exploitation/abuse, transinstitutionalization (hospitals to prisons)
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5
Q

Resistance

A
  • Disease paradigm: minimize symptoms (individual dimension of mental illness)
  • discrimination paradigm: minimize stigmatization and its consequences (social dimension of mental illness)
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6
Q

Resisting stigmatization

A

Stigma management
- Trying to hide illness to appear “normal”
- dividing social works (only revealing illness to those who are close)
- deflecting (distancing from the label and stereotypes of mental illness)
- challenging (fighting back against stigma through direct confrontation or presenting themselves as capable and competent)
- legislation, institutional policies and programs
- self-help and advocacy groups

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7
Q

Resisting inadequate and insufficient care

A
  • Advocacy and support groups: fighting for and lobbying the government to get more funding for mental health services, educate those affected about available options
  • heath care community: producing research on mental illness, improved treatments, lobbying the government for increased support/funding for mental health programs
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8
Q

Resisting medicalization

A
  • Physicians often push for medicalization believing it’s in the patient’s and society’s best interest (increases their authority, power, influence, and opportunity)
  • consumers and consumer groups: believe that medical intervention is more beneficial than legal intervention (individuals also want validation for their condition)
  • pharmaceutical industry:
    → disease mongering: pushing the idea that a particular disease exists and there is a treatment for it
    → branding a disease with a product: an ill for every pill
  • health insurance providers
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9
Q

Medicalization pros and cons

A

Pros:
→ legitimization/validation: provide answers about what’s going on and provide validation that their experiences are an illness
→ societal awareness and stigma reduction with certain conditions
→ development of beneficial therapies

Cons:
→ Empowerment of physicians and disempowerment of patients and limitation of options (if treatment plan is not followed they are considered irresponsible)
→ denial of social, economic, and political factors contributing to the illness

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10
Q

Critique of the DSM

A
  • Many argue that its inclusion of certain disorders is a matter of debate
  • it seems to be more political than a medical or scientific document (controlled by psychiatrists, insurance companies, and the pharmaceutical society; questions neutrality)
    -tends to pathologize normal behaviours and ignore contextual issues (social, political, and economic factors)
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11
Q

Critique of Mental Health practitioners

A
  • The influence of social factors on psychiatric diagnosis and the dehumanizing treatment of patients (gender, culture); Mental Health presents a Eurocentric bias
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12
Q

Critique of “mental illness” itself

A
  • One end of the continuum: mental illness is a real thing but psychiatry has pathologized too much
  • other end of the continuum: no such thing as mental illness, it’s pure fiction
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