week 11 individual differences Flashcards
DSM-5
The diagnostic statistical manual of mental disorders
Types of disorders
sleeping, eating, substance use, sex, attention, impulse control, personality.
Anything in everyday life can go wrong
The challenge
Horizontal expansion
Vertical expansion
Concept creep
More challenges
Official guidelines change over time
Professionals all have to agree on where the pathology begins
The cut-offs are somewhat arbitrary
Pathological levels
No diagnosis is done with one symptom
There are different factors to see if behaviour is pathological levels these are:
Chronicity, Severity, Disruption, control
Paradox
Cut-off points-> when mental illness is on a continuum
Clinicians are more concerned if symptoms affect function
Diagnosis can help to get treatment
but because of this cut-off points are more arbitrary
Stress doesn’t effect everyone in the same way
In a study of 2000 adult participants 89.6% had a traumatic event
only 9.2% had PTSD so most people with traumatic experience don’t develop mental disorder
Is this accurate
Adverse childhood experiences
Insurance company’s found ill health is related to traumatic childhood experiences
Understanding mental illness
is it
genes
environment or interaction
Personality disorders
individuals with personality disorders behave and think in way which is different from expected
Occur in adolescence or early adulthood
understanding is based on clinical diagnosis
10 different personality in DSM-5 in three clusters
Cluster A: paranoid personality disorder, schizoid personality disorder and schizotypal personality disorder
Cluster B : antisocial personality disorder, borderline personality disorder, histrionic personality disorder, narcissistic personality disorder
Cluster C: avoidant personality disorder, dependent personality disorder, obsessive-compulsive personality disorder
Five factor correlates
Personality disorders can be explained with the dimensions of high neuroticism and low agreeableness
Extraversion related positively to histrionic personality disorder
Gene-environment correlations
the combination of vulnerable genetics+ suboptimal parenting are tied together in a non-random way
this makes it hard to see if it is nature or nurture
Biopsychosocial model of personality disorders
psychopathology emerges from multiple interaction between risk and protective factors
Biological, Psychological, social
Survivor based criticisms `
Recover in the Bin, Mad pride, Hearing voices network
Highlight the importance of a social model of distress confusion
Negative impact of BPD diagnosis on treatment from healthcare professionals