diagnosis and classification of schizophrenia Flashcards
schizophrenia
a severe mental illness where contact with reality is impaired
classification of schizophrenia
- doesn’t have a single defining characteristic, cluster of symptoms, some of which appear to be unrelated
- ICD-10
- DSM-5
- in DSM system one positive symptom must be present for diagnosis whereas two or more negative symptoms are sufficient under ICD
- ICD recognises a range of subtypes of schizophrenia
positive symptoms of schizophrenia
additional experiences beyond those of ordinary existence, atypical symptoms experienced in addition to normal experience
-include hallucinations (distorted perceptions) and delusions (irrational beliefs)
negative symptoms
involve the loss of usual abilities and experiences
-include avolition (loss of motivation) and speech poverty (reduced frequency and quality of speech)
co-morbidity
occurrence of two illlnesses or conditions together, difficult to classify the two disorders seperately
symptom overlap
when two or more conditions share symptoms
reliability
poor inter rater reliability
- Cheniaux (2009)- has two psychiatrists diagnose 100 patients using both DSM and ICD
- one diagnosed 26 according to DSM and 44 according to ICD and the other diagnosed 13 according to DSM and 24 according to ICD
validity
schizophrenia is much more likely to be diagnosed using ICD, suggests schizophrenia is either over diagnosed in ICD or under diagnosed in DSM -poor validity
co-morbidity evaluation
2 or more conditions occur together, if conditions occur together or questions the validity of their diagnosis, might be a single condition
- Buckly-50% of patients with schizophrenia also diagnosed with depression or substance abuse, PTSD in 1/3 and OCD in 1/4
- poses and challenge for classification and diagnosis
- diathesis stressmodel
symptom overlap evaluation
schizophrenia and bipolar disorder both have positive symptoms, under ICD patient may be diagnosed schizophrenic but under DSM diagnosed as bipolar
gender bias in diagnosis
Longnecker (2010)- reviews studies and concluded since 1980s, men have been diagnosed much more often than women
- may be because men have a genetic vulnerability to it
- however it appears women are able to function better than men
cultural bias in diagnosis
positive symptoms such as hearing voices may be more acceptable in African cultures because of cultural beliefs