Sociocultural Psychiatry Flashcards
What is the social classification in Britain?
Class 1: Professional, managerial Class 2: Intermediate Class 3: Skilled, manual, clerical Class 4: semi-skilled Class 5: unskilled Class 6: unemployed
Which psychiatric disorders are not as common in lower social classes?
Anorexia
Alcohol abuse
Bipolar
What is the Jarman Index?
Scoring system for level of social deprivation in a community.
Who created the concept ‘sick role’?
Talcott Parsons
What makes up the sick role?
Sick person is exempt from normal social roles.
Sick people are not responsible for their disease.
Sick person must try and get well.
Sick person must seek help and cooperate with care.
What is the difference between illness and sickness?
Illness: personal experience
Sickness: social consequences
Define impairment
Interference with structural or psychological functions
Define disability
Interference with activities of the whole person in relation of immediate environment.
Define handicap
Social disadvantage resulting from disability
What does the Transtheoretical Model (Prochaska and DiClemente) state?
How individuals can change illness-related behaviour:
- Consciousness raising (help them gather info)
- Choosing - increase awareness of alternatives
- Catharsis - emotional expression of problem behaviour
- Conditional stimuli
- Contingency control - positive reinforcement + self-appraisal
What is conditional stimuli in the Transtheoretical Model?
Stimulus control - avoidance of stimuli associated with problem behaviour
Counterconditioning - training a healthier response to stimuli.
What are the six stages of change under the Transtheoretical Model?
- Precontemplation
- Contemplation
- Preparation
- Action
- Maintenance
- Relapse
Who created Motivational Interviewing?
Miller & Rollnick, 1991
Define health advocacy
Process of supporting and empowering patients and carers to express their opinions, ideas and concerns and enabling them to access appropriate information and services and promote their rights.
What is the libertarian principle in resource allocation?
Resources distributed according to market principle - patient as consumer, if they can pay then resources are available to them.
What does utilitarian principle suggest towards resource allocation?
Resources distributed according to maximum benefit to all
Which principle suggests resources should be distributed according to need?
Egalitarian
What does restorative principle suggest in terms of resource allocation?
Resources distributed with positive discrimination towards disadvantaged.
Outline the stages of the family cycle
Stage 1: formation of family
Stage 2: child rearing (birth to adolescence). Maintain marital relationship.
Stage 3: child launching - child leaves home.
Stage 4: return of independence - growth and extension of family.
Stage 5: dissolution - decline/demise of partners.
What are the schizophrenogenic family patterns according to Lidz?
Marital schism
Marital skew
What is marital schism?
Family is in disequilibrium due to repeated threats of parental separation. Parents downgrade roles of each other.
What is marital skew?
Family is at an equilibrium that is skewed and achieved at an expense of the distorted parental relationship.
What did Wynne suggest re families and schizophrenia?
Certain types of communication may be more present:
Pseudo-hostility + Pseudo-mutuality
Child forced to accept and develop communication that will negate and deny existence of meaningless relationships in the family.
What is the double-bind relationship?
Bateson: superficial verbal communication contradicts behavioural and deeper communication amongst family. These mixed messages keep child in a double bind that increases risk of psychosis.