schizophrenia Flashcards
What is schizophrenia?
A mental disorder which affects thought processes and the ability to determine reality
What are the two major classification systems
ICD-10 and DSM 5
what are positive symptoms?
symptoms experienced in addition to normal experiences
What are two types of positive symptoms
delusions and hallucinations
what are hallucinations?
unusual sensory experiences, include auditory and visual hallucinations
what are delusions?
irrational beliefs - take a range of forms
what are negative symptoms?
experiences that represent the loss of usual experiences such as clear thinking or ‘normal’ levels of motivation
what are two types of negative symptoms
avolition and speech poverty
what is avolition
losing the will to perform goal-directed activity due to decreased motivation e.g. lack of motivation to work
what is speech poverty
minimal verbal communication that lacks useful information, lacks characteristics of normal speech
what does reliability of diagnosis mean
consistency of symptom measurement - inter-rater reliability (extent to which different assessors agree on their assessments
evidence investigating reliability
Soderberg et al (2005)
- Soderberg et al. (2005): concordance rate of 81% using DSM
- DSM is regarded more reliable than ICD as symptoms outlined are more specific
evidence investigating reliability
Nilsson et al (2000)
- only 60% concordance rate between practitioners using ICD implying DSM is more reliable
Evidence investigating reliability
Cheniaux et al (2009)
- had two psychiatrists independently diagnose 100 patients using both DSM and ICD
- inter-rater reliability was poor, psychiatrists failed to diagnose patients consistently
Validity
the extent to which sz is a unique syndrome with characteristics, signs and symptoms