Defining Psychological Problems Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the difficulty in defining mental health problems

A

Statistical infrequencies:

  • normal distributed behaviour
  • infrequency doesn’t make it a problem (and also mental health problems are becoming more commonly identified)

Violating social norms:

  • It is too broad and too narrow; it would take into account the behaviour of criminals but not highly anxious individuals
  • culturally subjective
  • misses certain behaviour

Personal distress:

  • too difficult to measure
  • some disorders do not experience distress (psychopaths)

Dysfunctions:

  • depends on value judgements
  • internal mechanisms are not defined

Universality:
- differences with society, time, ethnics (e.g. are visions wise or psychotic?)

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2
Q

Describe the key elements of the DSM-5’s definition of mental health problems

A

Disturbance:

  • disruption to every day; flashbacks, physiological reactions
  • personal and present distresses (although not all mental disorders exhibit distress, not all distress is disordered)

Disability and dysfunction:

  • impairment in an area, something not working as it should - based on social norms
  • but not all disorders impair lives - bulimia patients lead normal lives whilst bingeing in private

Violation of social norms:

  • too broad (criminals won’t be considered as much in psychopathology and too narrow because highly anxious people don’t violate norms)
  • this changes depending on the time, ethnic group - cant be universal
  • definition factors in discrepancies and is available on notion
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3
Q

What are some early views of mental illness (pre-15th century)?

A
  • demons and supernatural powers (treated with exorcisms, trephination - holes in head, rituals)
  • Early biological - Hippocrates (460BC) - classified mental disorder as an imbalance of bodily fluids
  • mania, melancholia and phrenins and different treatments for each to balance the bodily fluids
  • Kraeplin postulated a chemical imbalance as the cause of dementia praecox (SZ) and an irregularity in metabolism as the explanation of manic-depressive psychosis (bipolar).
  • Lunacy trials - mental misalignment - dunking/tests
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4
Q

How did mental health asylums come about?

A

Leprosy hospitals became confinement/care for those mentally challenged
- usually crude, inhumane treatment of patients : Bedlam (tourist attraction/entertainment purposes)

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5
Q

Describe Pinel’s Reforms (1745-1826)

A
  • Movement into the humane treatment of those with disorders (was said to have released prisoners at French asylum but was actually Pussin)
  • approached disorders with dignity and better treatment - ALTHOUGH : better treatment reserved for upper classes - lower classes till treated like animals
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6
Q

Who is Dorothea Dix and what was she responsible for?

A
  • Moral treatment: encouraging humane treatment, closer contact and less than 250 people per hospital for individual treatments; this was abandoned later
  • Dorothea Dix (1802-1887) - protested for better treatment and rights with more hospital but small staff couldn’t accommodate the amount of patients, leading to less moral treatment)
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7
Q

Describe the modern outlook on mental health

A
  • not as taboo but still stigmatised
  • deinstitutionalization ; more community based
  • medications, therapies, reintergration into society and managing day to day
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8
Q

What creates stigmas around mental illness?

A
  • Distinguishing label
  • Label = linked to undesirable attitudes
  • Label = creates a divide with others
  • Label evokes discrimination
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9
Q

Describe strategies to reduce stigmatisation of mental disorders (Hinshaw, 2007)

A

Community:

  • Housing: improving housing for those with psychological disorders
  • Education: learning/reducing hesitancy to speak about it
  • Personal Contact: really effective, especially in informal settings

Health profession:

  • Evaluations prior to onset (preventative measure) - avoiding seriousness
  • Education/empirical evidence and understanding

Individual and family strategies:

  • Education, alleviating blame, treatments (psychoeducation)
  • Advocacy groups, blogs: emotional support and empowerment

Example efforts: creative socials, celeb endorse

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