LEC 5 - OCD and PTSD Flashcards
PTSD
PAST: To be diagnosed, a person (or loved one) must have been exposed to a traumatic event, involving actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violation.
NOW: Scope of PTSD has widened
Symptoms: re-experiencing, avoidance, arousal, and cognitive/mood changes
PTSD (Re-experiencing)
Person experiences feeling that event is reoccurring.
- E.g. Reliving experience, experiencing hallucinations
- Can cause individual to feel detached or unreal
PTSD (Avoidance and Arousal)
Avoidance of stimuli associated w/ event (e.g. memories, people, objects, thoughts, etc.).
* Increased arousal & anxiety.
* Recklessness, self-destructiveness.
PTSD (Cognitive and Mood Changes)
- Inability to recall specifics related to event.
- Estrangement.
- Anhedonia.
- Feeling that life is pointless or insignificant.
Inconvenient Diagnosis? (PTSD)
PTSD serves as a reminder that what counts as illness, how we define it, and who legitimizes it are all socially-dependent.
OCD
Obsessions and Compulsions (Need either to be diagnosed)
Recognition thoughts are unreasonable
Obsessions
thoughts that are recurring in nature
- Being difficult to control or to resist
- Lose control of thought process
- Rooted in thoughts that are socially ‘inappropriate’
- Related to dirt, filth, sexuality, violence
Compulsions
behaviours trying to control ones anxiety
- Obsessive thoughts are anxiety inducing so they try to find ease in the thoughts
- Ex. If I don’t touch this tile, the building will collapse
Hoarding Disorder
Persistent difficulty discarding possessions due to perceived need
- People see these objects to hold some sort of value
Rachel Cooper Argument
What is considered junk is subjective
May not be a medical problem
- If they won the lottery and got a bigger house, would it still be an issue?
- Should it be called a medical problem if it can be resolved by giving someone more space?
Is there a diagnosis necessary when there are laws in place to deal with this behaviour
Somatic Symptom Disorder
Having a long-term physical complaint
- Spending a lot of time trying to fix it
- A Headache, elbow pain, etc.
- Feeling prompts obsessive concern
- Not feeling better after getting medical attention
Illness Anxiety Disorder
Obsessive fear over becoming sick
- Spends excessive time researching illnesses
- Not easily reassured by physicians
- Over-sensitive to bodily sensations (Hunger, cold, etc.)
Problematizing SSD and IAD
Why should be assume people always feel better after accessing healthcare
- Thought to believe you are mentally ill if you don’t feel better
- Are we conditioned to obsess and worry over the body
Anxiety as a multidimensional phenomenon
PTSD and OCD come from the world of anxiety
- Anxiety is central to these experiences
- All of these things share avoidance
Case for Distinctness (OCD, PTSD, Anxiety)
- These illnesses do share anxiety, but they had symptoms that differentiate them from eachother
- Core symptoms are unique
- Yes, there is symptom overlap, but so do a lot of other mental health disorders