Week 5: Personality Disorders Flashcards
Personality
complex pattern of characteristics largely outside of the person’s awareness, which compromise the individual’s distinctive pattern of perceiving, feeling, thinking, coping and behavior
it is a higher level than the traits themselves -
Personality Traits
prominent aspects of personality that are exhibited in a wide range of social and personal contexts
The are the lower level - the behaviors that are exhibited as a part of personality basically
Personality and Personality Traits tend to do be what
stable over time (minor differences based on mood but generally consistent)
Personality Traits are enduring patterns of what 3 things
- Perceiving
- Relating To
- Thinking about environment and oneself
Personality involves what 4 aspects
- Cognition
- Affectivity
- Interpersonal Behavior
- Impulse Control
Cognition
ways of perceiving and assigning meaning to self, others, and events
Affectivity
the range intensity and appropriateness of emotionality
Personality development develops as a response to what things?
A number of Biological and Psychological Influences:
- Heredity
- Temperament
- Experiential Learning
- Social Interaction
Personality Disorders often manifest when
in adolescence and early adulthood
Prevalence of personality disorders is estimated to be about ___%
9.6
Personality disorders often co-occur with ___ and ___
depression and anxiety
It is important to know what regarding when personality disorders appear?
They will appear BEFORE other psychiatric disorders
ex: Someone with BPD will develop the depression and anxiety over time
Why is it so difficult to have accurate numbers about personality disorders
difficult to verify number of population affected due to significant numbers of individuals not seeking professional help
___ can be a major risk factor for the development of certain personality disorders
Gender
Women are at an increased risk for what personality disorders
Avoidant PD
Dependent PD
Paranoid PD
Men are at higher risk for what personality disorder
antisocial personality disorder
What groups have a higher prevalence and occurrence of personality disorders
African American and Native American Groups
Young Adults
Low SES
Divorced, Separated, Widowed, Never Married
Personality Disorder (Definition)
a RIGID, stereotyped behavioral pattern that persists throughout a person’s life.
a CHRONIC maladaptive pattern of perceiving, thinking, and relating that impairs social or occupational functioning causing inner distress
Rigid, throughout life, consistent, and chronic
Personality disorders deviate markedly from what
the expectations of a person’s culture
Personality disorders are ___ and put people are risk for ___ ___ like..;.
personality disorders are SERIOUS and put people at risk for PSYCHIATRIC CO-MORBIDITIES like Mood disorders, anxiety, substance abuse, injuries to self/others
Personality disorders occur when personality traits become what?
- Inflexible and Rigid (change very hard to make)
- Maladaptive
- Cause significant dysfunction (in roles, etc) or severe impairment and SUBJECTIVE distress
- A lifelong behavioral pattern that negatively affects many areas of life, causes problems, and is not produced by another disorder or illness
Individuals with personality disorders lack…
INSIGHT
Understanding of the impact of their behavior on their environment
Fail to accept consequences of their own behavior
Individuals with personality disorders when threatened may attempt to do what
manipulate or change their environment to decrease stress instead of actually changing the behavior
Many individuals with other psychiatric and medical diagnoses manifest symptoms of…
personality disorders
Psychoanalytic Theory of PD
Empathize importance of nurturing from immediate caregivers and loved ones for fostering positive personality traits
Biologic Theory of PD
stress influence of genetic transmission combined with environmental exposures for the formation of personality can lead to PD
Social Learning and Cognitive Perspectives Theory of Personality Disorders
People acquire personality characteristics through thought and interaction with their environment
When development is stalled, disrupted, or becomes negative…
there is a risk for problems - like personality disorders
According to the DSM V, Personality Disorders must meet what overarching criteria
- Significant impairment in self or interpersonal functions
- One or more pathological personality trait
- Impairments are stable over time / across situations
- Personality traits or trait expressions are not normative for developmental stage or cultural environment
- Not due to the use of a substance or medical condition
3 Cluster Types of Personality Disorders
A
B
C
Cluster A PDs represent behaviors described as what
A = ODD or ECCENTRIC
Cluster B PDs represent behaviors that are described as …
B = DRAMATIC, EMOTIONAL, or ERRATIC
High emotion and high charged interactions; lack of consistency in behavior - needs consistent treatment
Cluster C PDs represent behaviors that are described as …
C = ANXIOUS or FEARFUL
What PDs are in Cluster A
Paranoid PD
Schizoid PD
Schizotypal PD
What PDs are in Cluster B
Antisocial PD
Borderline PD
Histrionic PD
Narcissistic PD
Paranoid Personality Disorder
Cluster A - Odd or Eccentric
A pervasive DISTRUST and SUSPICIOUSNESS of others such that others’ motives are interpreted as malevolent and Quick to take Offence
Do not acknowledge their negative feelings and will Project negative feelings on others while looking for hidden meanings in conversations
When does Paranoid Personality Disorder develop
conditions begins by early adulthood and presents in a variety of contexts
Clinical Observations/Characteristics of Paranoid PD
Constantly on guard
Hypervigilant, guarded, oversensitive to surroundings and interactions
Ready for any real or imagined threat, mistrusts, and misinterprets cues
Magnifies and distorts environmental cues
Trusts NO ONE - has few if any friends
Constantly tests the honesty of others
DOES NOT LOSE CONTACT WITH REALITY
What is the major characteristic setting paranoid PD apart from schizophrenia
there is no loss of contact with reality in paranoid PD
Predisposing factors for paranoid PD
possible hereditary link
being subject to early parental antagonism and harassment
4.4% of population estimated to have paranoid PD