Modules 5&6 Flashcards
What factors should be considered regarding depression as an “epidemic”?
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Professor Wakefield: Increases in depression diagnoses reflect lack of distinguishing clinical from normal sadness (based on context, time)
- Lack of follow up opinion before medicating by GPs
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Mixed evidence for increases in MDD:
- Systematic review Baxter found increases in line with population growth. Did find increases in emotional distress (could be mixed up)
- Jorm (2017): Rates haven’t dropped despite increases in treatment and awareness. Did find many receiving treatment didn’t meet clinical guidelines.
- However, ongoing treatment may be appropriate to prevent relapse
- DIfferences in measurement styles across 20yrs an issue
What did Jorm (2018) find regarding the impact of the Better Access Scheme?
- Better Access Scheme = introduced in late 2006, nationwide roleout (without testing). By 2011, uptake was 3x initial estimates.
- Although use of psychology services role steeply (although starting to level out) levels of psychological distress haven’t changed, nor suicide rates
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Possible reasons:
- Intevention insufficent to produce signficiant change
- Services may not be going to the highest need groups
- Quality gap: services may not meet sufficient quality
- Provision of services may not be impacting on causes of distress such as unemployment, diet, social capital, income
- Limitations: medicare data doesn’t provide full picture (could reflect change in care cost rather than increases)
What issues do Mulder et al (2017) identify with stagnant rates of psychological distress?
- In NZ, and other countries, prevalence of psychological distress such as depression and anxiety havent decreased despite increases in services offered.
- Highlights need to reevalute current model of treatment
- Increased medication doesn’t appear to be working
- Need to shift to preventative model based on modifiable risk factors?
- Factors such as income inequality, prejudice, competitive values
- Low income people have high rates of loneliness and psychological distress
What is the role of “big pharma” in the depression epidemic?
- Debate over the role of financially motivated prescriptions
- Bell (2005) suggest 3-fold impact; multinational drug companies, medical practitioners who write prescriptions, the public who turn to medicine for answers
- Contrast argument; SSRI scripts have plateued
- Prescription Rights: Should psychologists be able to write scripts
- Benefits of integrating medical/psychological intervention
- Risks of non-medical prescribing
What is Thanatology?
- Scientific study of psychology of death, grief and loss. Relatively new field not to be confused with palliative care (focused on pain/management).
- Psychology of grief: not only a response to death but all kinds of loss eg job loss, breakups, amputation, etc
- Grief affects affective, cognitive, physical, behavioural, social, and spiritual functioning
- Thanology examines 4 key characteristics of grief:
- Pervasive: wide ranging effects
- Dynamic: active process involving emotions/cognition
- Individual: every experience is different
- A process: no time limit or static progression
What different types of grief are there?
- All four types of grief can be acute or chronic
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Disenfranchised grief: Occurs in response to losses that cannot be openly acknowledged, publicly mourned, or socially supported; four types:
- Stigma related to cause of death, stigma related to relationship (eg affair), when relationship not seen as significant (eg pet, early misacarriage) or loss not seen as valid (eg dementia)
- Anticipatory grief: grief experienced in anticipation of eventual loss, for example, grieving whilst loved ones are progressively declining in health, or grieving in anticipation of an upcoming redundancy or divorce.
- Complicated grief: focus for research and practice before DSM-5, a factor in removing the bereavement exclusion criteria. For some individuals the experience of grief is prolonged, debilitating, and results in impairment in daily functioning.
- Developmental, or maturational, grief: grief over life transitions. Some transitions involve relinquishing activities and friends; Empty-nest syndrome and retirement, functional losses associated with ageing.
What implications do theories of grief have for practice?
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Original theory:“On Death and Dying” Sucessfully progressing through 5 stages of grief (not currently supported)
- Limited utility since conceptualises client as passive
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Current models describe grief as an active process which takes effort (“grief work”)
- 90% of people don’t require professional help, using their own resources and networks to cope
- 10% develop impairment and need extra help often social isolation when not feeling supported. Risk factors: attachment style, manner of loss
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Changes in interventions focus: promote attachment to lost person rather than letting go. Restoration oriented (find meaning in loss, reinvest in life)
- Attachment based interventions, schema, CBT etc (sand therapy, play therapy)
- Reminescence Therapy (go through memories together)
What are the causes and effects of disenfranchised grief?
- DG reduces social support and ability of griever to mourn, can also be internalised leading to shame & guilt
- Developed through research on death of ex-spouses
- Caused by lack of social recognition of:
- The relationship with the deceased; same sex partners, ex-partners, long lost friends
- The loss; death of pets, role models, spiritual leaders, non-death loss. Also includes anticipatory grief, or socially stigmatised causes of death.
- The mourner: People who aren’t considered capable of grieving (too young/too old compared to lost person, disabled)
What are the three most common grief trajectories?
- Resilience (45-60%): Short-lived disruptions to overall functioning, tends to resolve within a few months (average 6).
- Recovery (15-25%): Moderate levels of distress following a loss, incl strong feelings of yearning and disruptions to everyday resolves within a yearish.
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Complicated or prolonged grief (10-15%): Considerable, persistent and pervasive grief-related distress, often lasting years.
- Link to sleep disturbances, cardiovascular and cancers, and high-risk behaviours
What factors influence grief trajectories?
- Resilience trajectory: younger, increased social support, less loneliness, less dependancy, less anxiety attachment style, greater ability to reflect fondly on loss
- No signficant differences have been found between those in resilience and recovery trajectories
- Compared to resilient, prolonged grief 6x destructive overdependence but 8x higher relationship quality suggesting romanticised view of relationship.
- Greater grief severity only predictor of grief persistence after 6 years
- Grief severity increased for women, loss of child, depression
What is positive/successful ageing?
- Positive ageing has two broad goals:
- Develop/implement strategies promoting successful ageing via modifiable factors (eg. illness, optimising capabilities, social interactions, engagement)
- Explore psychological constructs linked to ageing well.
- What constitutes successful ageing? No clear agreement
- 99% of research on ageing relates to differences between normal and pathological (eg dementia), not best
- Estimates suggest only 12% of those over 65 meet all criteria for successful ageing, yet some self-report studies had 90% saying they were ageing well
- Factors associated with feelings of sucessful ageing
- Actual age, reduced depression
- Older people identify “adaptability” AKA resilience
What key characteristics are related to positive ageing?
- Cognitive reserve: Model in which brain plasticity maintains neural processes enhanced through cognitively meaningful and stimulating activities.
- Mastery: A global sense of control over life and the future. High mastery linked to reduced anxiety, greater problem solving and protection from hardship (financial, health changes).
- Self-efficacy: High self-efficacy is linked to a higher quality of life, less loneliness, less distress, better cognitive function.
- Wisdom: Thought to consist of three domains. Cognitive (expert knowledge, reasoning) Affective (postive emotions, emotional regulation) and Reflective (accepting alternative views, perspectives).
- Resilience: The ability to maintain subjective wellbeing despite experiencing challenges.
- Spirituality: Due to the meaning religiosity/spirituality can contribute to life, but also linked to response to illness, greater resilience, and improved health behaviours. Also Self-reflection and the search for existential meaning
- Purposeful engagement/sense of purpose: Activities that maintain social roles, align with values, meaningful to the individual. Ie. setting/fulfilling objectives, ongoing learning, and viewing life as having potential.
What is the evidence for positive ageing interventions?
- Supporting evidence: Strongest evidence is for diet and exercise interventions, however large variation in styles impairs meta-analysis.
- The most effective interventions; Adopted a community development approach;Had the ability to be adapted to fit a specific local area; and focused on productive engagement
- Critics argue that positive psychology is bad science, based on abstract, poorly defined and tested ideas.
- Eg altruism
- issues with terminology; does getting sick mean you have “failed” if the opposite is success?
- Implications that unsuccessful ageing is a personal failure.
What changing themes in models of grief are outlined by Hall (2014)?
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Rejection of “stages” of grief: Early grief models focused on phases and stages which need to be worked through.
- Freud: 3 stages: letting go, radjusting to new circumstances, forging new bonds
- Kubler Ross: 5 stages of grief.
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Multiple trajectories of grief: Bonnano identified 5 common trajectories of grief with varying levels of resilience and depression
- Duel Process Model: grief is an oscillation between two modes - loss orientation and restoration orientation
- Task-Based model: Active model where people have 4 tasks, also 7 factors which influence trajectories
- Continuing Bonds: Move away from “letting go/moving on” models towards acknowledgement of maintaining a connection to the deceased
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Reconstruction of meaning: postmodern socialist construction approaches focus on making sense of the loss and finding new meaning.
- Two concepts: Making sense of the loss, and finding benefits (eg growth)
- Failure to find meaning is linked to hightened complications
What does Hall (2014) indentify regarding complications of grief?
- Complicated grief disorder: 10-15% of people experience intense/chronic grief for months or years.
- Often result of unexpected, untimely deaths (violent, accident, death of child)
- DSM-5; although not yet clear enough for inclusion, identified as of interest, led to grief-exclusion of MDD
- Grief interventions:
- Evidence shows intervention is only effective for prolonged or complicated grief
- Antidepressants aren’t effective
- Interventions need to flexible due to highly individual process of grieving
What does McNutt (2013) highlight regarding disenfranchised grief in LGBTIQ?
- LGBT widows/widowers often experience increased social exlusion in terms of:
- Exclusion from funeral plans by deceased’s family, Lack of legal recognition, Lack of relevant social support structures, AIDS stereotypes for gay men
- Anticipated grief appears stronger in LGBT couples
- Componding issues for aged care
- Implications for counselling: Consider own biases and assumptions
- Remain aware of possible discrimination during illness
- Use affirmative stance; consider narrative therapy, CBT, address internalised stigma
- Consider unique stories, compounding pressures
What limitations does McNutt identify in LGBT grief research?
- Limited current research on gay deaths not related to AIDs
- Need for greater focus on older LG people
- Incorporation of LGBT people into other grief studies
- Role of compounding factors and identities
How does positive psychology meld with healthy ageing according to Stirling?
- Changing views of old age toward flourishing: The clearest connections between happiness and its possible causes are seen in the elderly
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Emotional regulation appears to improve in older age
- Increased focus on positive, cognitive control over re-appraisal of past choices,
- Socio-emotional selective theory; awareness of finite time causes changing motivations immediate, positive valuable goals.
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“Gerotranscendence” = increased life satisfaction, reduced self-occupation, heightened affinity to others across 3 dimensions:
- Cosmic dimension (changing sense of time as wholistic)
- Dimension of self (looking outward)
- Social dimension (fewer high value relationships)
- Environments for thriving arise when a) social roles involve wellbeing b) drawing strength and resilience from older community members c) include disability as a normalised part of life.
What is the role of positive psychology in chronic illness management?
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Keyes model of mental health in ageing: Two variables (psychological wellbeing and chronic illness symptoms) result in four types of coping skills
- Adapting (high/high) flourishing (highP/lowCI), floundering (lowPW/HighCI) Languishing (Low/low)
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Factors that influence coping with chronic illness:
- Resilience: Capacity for adaptation. Fostered through secure attachments, self-esteem, a sense of agency
- Optimism and positive expectancy; Increased flexible coping strategies, sense of control, societal level expectations re ageing
- Self-efficacy: Use of goal setting, thoughts of self-agency, viewing limitations as opportunities
What is terrorism?
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Combs: No universally accepted definition between academic /political/ general contexts. However, four common features agreed apon
- Targeting civilians
- Driven by political/social motives
- Used to create fear
- Involves acts of violence
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Categories of terrorist acts (Combs):
- Mass terror: committed by political leaders to general population (e.g., Stalin)
- Random terror: committed by individuals or groups, targeted at civilians (e.g., 9/11)
- Focused random terror: Similar methods as random, but in areas with large numbers of the opposition (e.g., Israeli-Palestine conflicts).
- Dynastic terror: assassinations targeting a ruling elite or state leader (e.g., the assassination of Benazir Bhutto).
- Lone wolf terror: individuals acting alone, targeting governments or civilians
What are some key challenges in studying terrorism?
- Lack of agreed definition
- Overreliance on secondary sources; newspaper reporting
- Including secondary reporting of manifestos
- Subject to bias, inaccuracy, underreporting
- Difficulty accessing primary sources/direct interviews
- With purpetrators or family
What did Vergani et al (2019) find re Terror Management Theory?
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TMT theory = cultural worldview and self-esteem are intertwined and buffer existential anxiety. Increased mortality salience (MS) prompts extremism to combat increased fear.
- Limits of previous research linking MS to radicalisation
- inconsistent MS measurement, A-priori hypotheses, researcher bias,
- Limits of previous research linking MS to radicalisation
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Experiments: 3 studies with MS manipulation (AUS, AUS primed with antiviolence, young jewish students)
- MS did not increase support for violence in any study
- MS did increase support for conservative religious policies, divine power in study 1 (not in study 2 after antiviolence prime)
- Limitations: extremist values may be too generic, too disconnected from experiences of non-extreme samples
What did Das et al find supporting the Terror Management Theory of radicalisation?
- Das et al examined the pathway of death-related thoughts in the relationship between mortality salience and extremist views. Examines 3 assumptions of TMT:
- Pivotal role of death-related thoughts in predicting prejudice
- Self-esteem reduces effects of MS
- MS will increase prejudice against any outgroup
- Experiments: 3 studies tested exposure to terror news or control.
- All 3 primes increased death-related thoughts, which in turn influenced prejudice.
- Study 1: death of artist in terror half way though created ceiling effect. Prejudice was only seen after death.
- Study 2: prejudice rates higher with low self-esteem
- Study 3: terror news increased prejudice against arab for whites, against whites for arab audiences
- Limitations: unclear mechanisms for arab prejudice (anticipated stimga?)
What is Benedek, Ursano and Holloways 4-Phase model of response to terrorism?
- Immediate Aftermath: Strong emotional reactions incl numbness, disbelief, fear and confusion
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1 week to several months: Involves active efforts to adapt to the new environment. May include:
- Intrusive and hyperarousal symptoms
- Somatic symptoms such as headaches, dizziness, and nausea.
- Anger, irritability and social withdrawal.
- Several Months: Emergence of disappointment and resentment as it becomes evident that aid and restoration is unlikely to lead to complete return to pre-attack status.
- Months to years: A reconstruction phase typified by physical and emotional re-building, resumption of old roles, re-establishing social connections.