1 / 30

Psychosocial Health

Psychosocial Health. What is psychosocial health?. The mental, emotional, social, and spiritual dimensions of health. Psychosocially healthy people: Feel good about themselves Feel comfortable with other people Control tension and anxiety Meet the demands of life Curb hate and guilt

euclid
Download Presentation

Psychosocial Health

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Psychosocial Health

  2. What is psychosocial health? • The mental, emotional, social, and spiritual dimensions of health. • Psychosocially healthy people: • Feel good about themselves • Feel comfortable with other people • Control tension and anxiety • Meet the demands of life • Curb hate and guilt • Maintain a positive outlook • Value diversity • Appreciate and respect nature • Enrich the lives of others

  3. Maslow’s hierarchy of needs

  4. Four aspects of P.s. health • 1. Mental Health: The Thinking You • Includes your values, attitudes, and beliefs. • Mentally healthy individuals: • Have the intellectual ability to sort through information, messages, and life events, to attach meaning, and to respond • Likely to respond to life’s challenges constructively • Know when to seek help • Know when they are okay and when they are starting to slide

  5. Four aspects of P.s. health • 2. Emotional Health: The Feeling You • Includes your emotional reactions to life • Emotionally healthy individuals: • Respond appropriately to upsetting events • Able to express feelings, communicate with others, and show emotions in an appropriate way • Can affect social health, academic performance, etc.

  6. Four aspects of P.s. health • 3. Social Health: Interactions with Others • Ability to use social supports, and ability to adapt to various situations. • Socially healthy individuals: • Have wide range of interactions with family, friends, and acquaintances • Able to listen and express themselves • Form healthy attachments • Act in socially acceptable and responsible ways

  7. Four aspects of P.s. health • 4. Spiritual Health: An Inner Quest for Well-Being • Relates to having a sense of meaning and purpose to one’s life, as well as a feeling of connection with others and with nature. • Broader than religion • Spiritually healthy individuals: • Recognize our identity as unique individuals • Gain a better appreciation of our strengths and shortcomings and our place in the universe

  8. Influential factors • Family • Environment • Self efficacy • Self esteem • Learned helplessness versus learned optimism • Personality • Life span and maturity

  9. Self esteem skills • Pay attention to your own needs and wants. • Take good care of yourself. • Take time to do things you enjoy. • Do something you have been putting off for a sense of accomplishment. • Give yourself rewards. • Spend time with people who make you feel good about yourself. • Take advantage of any opportunity to learn something new. • Do something nice for another person.

  10. Personality • Those who possess the following traits often appear to be psychosocially healthy: • Extroversion • Aggreeableness • Openness to experience • Emotional stability • Conscientiousness • Resiliency

  11. What is your personality? • http://www.humanmetrics.com/cgi-win/jtypes1.htm • Use dictionary for unknown words. • Answer honestly for best results. • Write down 4 words of your personality description. • Journal reflection: • Summary of description. • Is this description realistic for you? Why or why not? • Use specific examples.

  12. Enhancement strategies • Find a support group. • Complete required tasks. • Form realistic expectations. • Make time for you. • Maintain physical health through exercise. • Examine problems and seek help when necessary. • Get adequate sleep.

  13. When it deteriorates • Abusive relationships • Stress • Anxiety • Loneliness • Financial upheavals • Traumatic events • Chemical imbalances • Drug interactions • Neurological disruptions • Acting in ways that are outside of what might be considered normal. • MENTAL ILLNESSES: disorders that disrupt thinking, feelings, moods, and behaviors and cause a varying degree of impaired functioning in daily life.

  14. Mental illnesses/disorders • 57.7 million U.S. adults suffer from a diagnosable mental disorder in any given year. • 6% suffer from a serious mental illness requiring close monitoring, residential care in many instances, and medication. • Leading cause of disability in the U.S. and Canada for people aged 15-44.

  15. Mood disorders • Chronic mood disorders: disorders that affect how you feel. • i.e.: persistent sadness or feelings of euphoria. • Include: • Depression, dysthymia, bipolar disorder, and seasonal affective disorder. • 30 years old is the median age of onset for mood disorders.

  16. Depressive disorders • Symptoms: • Loss of motivation or interest in pleasurable activities • Preoccupation with failures and inadequacies; concern over what others are thinking • Difficulty concentrating; indecisiveness; memory lapses • Fatigue and loss of energy; slow reactions • Sleeping too much or too little • Withdrawal from friends and family • Diminished or increased appetite • Significant weight loss or weight gain • Thoughts of death or suicide

  17. causes of depressive disorders • Interaction between biology • Learned behavioral responses • Cognitive factors • Environment • Situational triggers and stressors

  18. Treating mood disorders • Both psychotherapeutic and pharmacological modes of treatment are used. • Psychotherapeutic treatment: • Cognitive therapy-helps to look at life rationally and correct pessimistic thought patterns. • Focuses on the present rather than the past. • Pharmacological treatment: • Antidepressant drugs • Common drugs: SSRIs-selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors

  19. Anxiety disorders • Characterized by persistent feelings of threat and worry in coping with everyday problems. • Generalized Anxiety Disorder: a constant sense of worry that may cause restlessness, difficulty in concentrating, tension, and other symptoms. • Panic attacks: severe anxiety reaction in which a particular situation, causes terror • PTSD: a collection of symptoms that may occur as a delayed response to a serious trauma.

  20. Phobic disorders • Phobia: a deep and persistent fear of a specific object, activity, or situation that results in a compelling desire to avoid the source of the fear. • Achluophobia - Fear of darkness • Claustrophobia - Fear of confined spaces • Hydrophobia - Fear of water • Podophobia - Fear of feet • Scolionophobia - Fear of school

  21. Obsessive compulsive disorder • Characterized by recurrent, unwanted thoughts and repetitive behaviors. • Feel compelled to perform rituals over and over again. • Powerless to stop behaviors. • 2 million Americans over age 18 have OCD. • Obsessions must consume more than 1 hour per day and interfere with normal social and/or life activities.

  22. Personality disorders • A class of mental disorders that is characterized by inflexible patterns of thought and beliefs that lead to socially distressing behavior. • Paranoid personality disorders: pervasive, unfounded suspicion, and mistrust of other people, irrational jealousy, and secretiveness. • Narcissistic personality disorders: exaggerated sense of self importance and self absorption. • Borderline personality disorder: impulsiveness and engaging in risky behaviors.

  23. Schizophrenia • Mental illness with biological origins that is characterized by : • Irrational behaviors • Severe alterations of the senses (hallucinations) • Inability to function in society • Altered sense of self • Radical changes in emotions, movements, and behaviors • Treatable but not curable

  24. True life Episode True Life: I Have Schizophrenia

  25. suicide • 32,000 reported in the U.S. every year. • More lives are lost to suicide than to any other single cause except cancer and cardiovascular disease. • Women attempt more than men. • Men are more successful in their attempts.

  26. Warning signs • Recent loss and inability to let go of grief • History of depression • Change in personality: sadness, withdrawal, anxiety, etc. • Change in behavior • Expressions of self-hatred, excessive risk taking • Change in sleep patterns or eating habits • Direct statement: “I might as well end it all.” • Indirect statement: “You won’t have to worry about me anymore.” • Final preparations

  27. prevention • Monitor warning signals • Take threats seriously • Let the person know how much you care about him or her • Listen • Ask directly • Do not belittle the person’s feelings • Help the person think about alternatives • Tell individual’s spouse, partner, parents, siblings, or counselor

  28. Consider seeking help if: • You feel like you need help. • You begin to withdraw from others. • You have hallucinations. • You are considering suicide. • You feel out of control. • You turn to drugs or alcohol to escape from your problems. • Your daily life seems to be nothing but repeated crises.

  29. Mental health project • Requirements: • Topic: Mental illness or disorder • Paper: 3-4 pages in length (double spaced) • 2-4 sources (reliable) • Use class time. • Due next week.

  30. Source: • Donatelle, Rebecca J. Health: The Basics. Green ed. San Francisco, CA: Benjamin Cummings, 2011. Print.

More Related