Diagnosis and formulation in clinical psychology COPY Flashcards
What did mental health look like in the dark / middle ages
demonological thinking but in a Christian context
obsession with witchcraft and evil spirits = people were killed, punishment
Rise of asylums
1900 to now mental health
- Late 1930s-40s: Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) unconscious produce a fit like state - some evidence-based that it works - changing the brain waves.
- 1940s-1960s: Lobotomy
- Late 1940s-80s: First psychiatric drugs
1950s: Fall of the asylums / deinstitutionalisation. Increase in community-based mental health care
What do the stages of mental health diagnosis look like now?
1) Primary care = prescription of antidepressants and referral to other services
2) Secondary care = Community-based mental health teams + Psychiatric hospitals (generally very unwell, at risk, or risky patients)
Tertiary care = Specialist services e.g. specialist eating disorder services, forensic mental health, in patient re-hab)
How to we form a concept of mental health today using the biopsychosocial model
Biological Factors:
Genetic defects or inherited vulnerabilities; poor prenatal care, head injuries, exposure to toxins, diet, chronic physical illness, or disability - often overlap between these
Psychological Factors:
Personality traits (e.g. perfectionism), stress, cognitive styles, coping strategies, IQ, beliefs, behavior
Social Factors:
Poverty, homelessness, overcrowding, stressful living conditions, adversity, parents with mental ill-health, family or societal norms/expectations/communication styles, severe marital or relationship problems, trauma
What is the Stress Vulnerability model? and how does it explain mental health?
The stress vulnerability model proposes that anyone can develop mental health problems, given stress, biological, social, and psychological stressors.
People are more vulnerable to mental disorders if they have been exposed to more stressors, especially in their younger life.
Stress is a limited capacity which gets even more limited as people get older.
Explains why little things can tip us over the edge like a bucket analogy
Why is it good to explain the stress vulnerability model to patients
Makes people feel like their not alone. Everyone experiences stress, and their actions can feel irrational but when putting it into this perspective it makes sense.
Diagnosis is made using a classification system: What is this?
Classification system is:
1) A comprehensive list of disorders, with
2) Description of the symptoms
3) Guidelines for assigning individuals to disorder
Each disorder is assumed to have its own:
1) Origins
2) Symptoms
3) Course and outcome
Name two examples of classification systems
World Health Organisation: ICD-11 – covers both medical & psychological conditions
American Psychiatric Association: DSM-5
Lists the current DSM-5 definition of mental disorder (3 things) and 2 things it is NOT
- Clinically significant disturbance in cognition, emotion regulation or behavior
- Dysfunction in psychological, biological, or developmental processes
- Significant distress or disability in social, occupational or other important activities
- NOT due an expectable or culturally approved response to a common stressors or loss
NOT socially deviant behaviour (e.g. political, religious or sexual) UNLESS it results from a dysfunction in the individual
Are diagnoses helpful, valid and representative of what is going on for clinicians and researchers?
Yes, allows clinicans to quickly identify:
-cause of problem
-and effective treatments quickly
-creates a common language for psychologists and clinicans to discuss cases and research
-
Are psychiatric diagnosis helpful for the patient?
How?
Yes.
-allows them to understand what is happening / what is expected and potential duration
-normalise experience
-Identify helpful treatment
Why does the classification system keep changing? in relation to the rosenhan study
○ Rosenhan et al 1973 study – Attended psychiatric hospitals complaining of hearing voices after not washing or shaving for 5 days; once admitted, they said the voices ‘had gone’. Then continued to behave ‘normally’
○ Admitted for 7-52 days - everything pseudo-patients did was interpreted in light of assumed pathology - all their behaviours were interpreted as in line with mental health disorders despite acting completely normal. Shows how un-reliable diagnosis was.
Led to DSM-III – highly descriptive, symptom checklists – aiming to increase inter-rater reliability of diagnosis
List some of the disadvantages of psychiatric diagnosis
Still have ongoing problems with reliability
Ignores individuality of people’s psychological issues ( possibility that the same symptom may occur as a result of different causes)
Problems with being ‘labelled’
(Prejudice and discrimination, jobs, friends, housing, insurance etc. may all be more difficult to get if you’ve got a psychiatric record)
(Creates a sense of “Us and them” / “ill” or “not ill”)
List Coma’s 4 D’s
- Deviance
- Distress
- Dysfunction
- Danger
What is Deviance
Anything different or abnormal
-takes into account different norms of different societies
-example of abnormal behaviour that goes against societal norms ‘repeated swearing that is associated with tourettes
Limitations of ‘deviance’ as a measure
Norms of behaviour differ across different cultures and different periods of time.
Abnormal behaviours are not that uncommon. A study suggested 20-55% of adults have psychological problems at some point in their lives that would meet official criteria for diagnosis (Kessler et al, 2005)