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Psychological Abnormal Disorders

Psychological Abnormal Disorders. Cases. Andrea Yates Ted Kaczynski: the unibomber “Nancy” Mark David Chapman (shot John Lennon) John Hinckley (shot Pres. Reagan) Jeffrey Dahmer, Ted Bundy John Nash “A Beautiful Mind”. “Abnormal” is Difficult to Define.

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Psychological Abnormal Disorders

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  1. Psychological Abnormal Disorders

  2. Cases • Andrea Yates • Ted Kaczynski: the unibomber • “Nancy” • Mark David Chapman (shot John Lennon) • John Hinckley (shot Pres. Reagan) • Jeffrey Dahmer, Ted Bundy • John Nash “A Beautiful Mind”

  3. “Abnormal” is Difficult to Define • Symptomology exists on a continuum • Often quantitative rather than qualitative differences • Point of view of the individual • Distress • Dysfunction • Point of view of the culture • Deviance from cultural norms • Threatening or troublesome for society

  4. Defining Abnormal Behavior I prefer the 4 D’s Dysfunctional behavior (maladaptiveness of ineffectiveness) Deviance (Bizarreness, social deviance) Distress (discomfort) Dangerousness

  5. Characteristics & Criteria for Defining Abnormal Behavior 1 1. Distress: Personal discomfort, or subjective distress Is the person anxious, depressed? Does the person have nightmares, feel guilty, feel dead and so forth? Exception: manics, antisocial PD 2. Deviance: Extreme Social Deviance Is the behavior bizarre, threatening, troublesome, dangerous, unpredictable? Are rules of conduct being broken? Does the person misperceive reality? (e.g.,hearing voices, pulling out one’s hair, starving)

  6. Characteristics & Criteria for Defining Abnormal Behavior 2 3. Dysfunction: Maladaptive behavior, psychological handicap. Does the person have an impaired ability to function adequately in everyday social and occupational roles. (e.g., if agoraphobia keeps a person from working, or depression keeps the person from going to school, the behavior has become dysfunctional or maladaptive for that person)

  7. Characteristics & Criteria for Defining Abnormal Behavior3 • Dangerousness: Is the person a danger to himself, others, or society? Most people who have psychological problems are not dangerous to others. If the person has a history of violence, he or she could be more dangerous than the average person--otherwise, they are usually not dangerous. Those who commit crimes receive a great deal of publicity which leads us to overestimate the threat (vividness).

  8. Distress, disability, deviance, and dangerousness all play a role in defining abnormal behavior but no one factor is sufficient to account for all abnormal behavior.

  9. Level of Disturbance (how severe) 1. Bizarreness--How extreme is the behavior? 2. Duration--How long have the symptoms persisted? 1 month(?) 6 months(?) Years(?) 3. Social Functioning--The extent of the effect on social functioning. (Can the person leave the house, hold a job, etc.?)

  10. Eccentrics • Do not have a psychological disorder • Behavior may violate social norms (deviant) • No distress, the behavior provides pleasure • Weeks studied & concluded they were happy & well-adjusted (2 in 10,000)

  11. Abnormal Behavior Psychological Disorder-a preferred term Psychological Problems Psychiatric Disorder-a preferred term Psychopathology-medical term Deviant Behavior Mental Illness-medical term. Disorder is probably a better term. Deviance-used by sociologists Mental Disease Mental Problems Mental Difficulties Nervous Disorder Emotional Disorder Emotional Problems Emotionally Disturbed Maladaptive Behavior Psychologically Handicapped Sociopathy Sociopath Psychopath Adjustment Disorders Terms for Abnormal Behavior

  12. Organic Brain Disease/Psychogenic disease Developmental Disorders Poor Mental Health Insanity-legal term which has no meaning in DSM IV "Neuroses"-no longer used ”Nervous Breakdown"- a layperson’s term Psychoses Personality Problems/Disorders Problems in Living--preferred by those opposed to diagnosis Terms for Abnormal Behavior 2

  13. Incidence/Prevalence • Epidemiology: Public Health • Incidence: How many new cases per population unit in time period (e.g., one year) • Prevalence: Relative proportion of active cases at a given point in time or during a given period of time. Lifetime prevalence vs. point prevalence vs. one-month prevalence

  14. Frequency/Prevalence of Serious Mental Disturbances 1 Estimates depend on a variety of factors, but one credible estimate is that in any given year, as many as 30 percent of the adults and 20% of the children and adolescents in the United States are believed to display serious mental disturbances and to be in need of clinical treatment. 

  15. Frequency/Prevalence of Serious Mental Disturbances 2 Of every 100 people in the U.S. 13 Anxiety Disorder 10 Alcohol and Drug abuse problems 6 Profound Depression 5 Personality Disorder 1 Schizophrenia 1 Alzheimer’s 36   Friedman et al, 1996, Kessler et al, 1994, 1996

  16. Sex Differences (One-Month Prevalence Rate) Men Women Substance Abuse 6.3 1.6 Antisocial PD .8 .2 Mood Disorders 3.5 6.6 Anxiety Disorders 4.7 9.7 Eating Disorders mostly Somatization neg. .2

  17. Reasons for Diagnoses 1. diagnosis is a communication shorthand 2. it may suggest something about treatment 3. it may suggest etiology 4. it aids scientific communication 5. it allows payment by third parties

  18. Taxonomies: Imply Levels of Knowledge • Symptom • Syndrome • Disorder: a cluster of symptoms not accounted for by another problem • Disease: underlying etiology is known

  19. DSM-IV • Axis I: Clinical Disorders • (Anxiety Disorders, Mood Disorders) • Axis II: Personality Disorders & Mental Retardation (long- standing problems) • Axis III: General Medical Conditions (Diabetes, CHD) • Axis IV: Psychosocial & Environmental problems (Divorce, lose job) • Axis V: Assessment of functioning

  20. Some Axis I Clinical Disorders • Anxiety Disorders • Mood Disorders • Schizophrenia & other Psychoses • Somatoform Disorders • Sexual Dysfunctions • Dissociative Disorders • Substance-related Disorders

  21. Stress; Adjustment Disorders; PTSD 1 Except as listed below, reactions to stress are not listed in DSM IV.   Adjustment disorders:  Disorders characterized by the development of clinically significant emotional and behavioral symptoms within 3 months following the onset of an identifiable common stressor, i.e., divorce, losing a job, etc. Worse than average response. Symptoms must be maladaptive and can last up to six months.  After that, diagnosis must change.       

  22. Stress; Adjustment Disorders; PTSD •  Adjustment disorder with anxiety       •  Adjustment disorder with depressed mood  •  Adjustment disorder with conduct disturbance 

  23. Stress; Adjustment Disorders; PTSD 3 Reactions to Catastrophic or Traumatic (Life- threatening) Events   •  Acute Stress Disorder.  Occurs within four weeks of the traumatic event, lasts a minimum of two days and a maximum of four weeks.  If symptoms last longer than one month, it becomes PTSD   •  Post-traumatic stress disorder.  If symptoms last longer, and are more severe.

  24. Anxiety Disorders Panic Disorder w/o agoraphobia- (palpitations of the heart, shortness of breath, dizziness, trembling, chest pains, etc.) Panic Disorder with agoraphobia(avoid public places)Specific phobia- (e.g.,snakes, heights) Social phobia- severe, persistent and irrational fears of social or performance situations in which embarrassment may occur.

  25. Anxiety Disorders cont. Obsessive-compulsive Disorder- (persistent thoughts, images, that invade a person’s consciousness); repetitive and rigid behaviors or mental acts that a person feels compelled to perform to avoid anxiety). Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Acute Stress Disorder Generalized anxiety disorder(pervasive anxiety)

  26. Criteria for Diagnosing Anxiety Disorders 1 Panic Disorder:  recurrent, unexpected panic attacks followed by a period of 1 month or more in which there is persistent concern about having additional attacks, or significant behavior change  Agoraphobia:  anxiety about being in situations from which escape might be either difficult or embarrassing. Avoidance & distress are elements.  Specific phobia:  a marked and persistent fear that is excessive or unreasonable, cued by the presence or anticipation of a specific object or situation.  Must interfere with normal activities or relationships.

  27. Criteria for Diagnosing Anxiety Disorders Social phobia:  like above but includes “performance”. A person avoids or is afraid of  social situations (performance anxiety or interpersonal interactions).  Fear of being humiliated  GAD: excessive anxiety and worry.  The worry must occur more days than not for a period of at least 6 months.  Must include a number of different activities and events.  OCD: Has either obsessions or compulsions which he or she must recognize as unreasonable and attempt to suppress.

  28. Depression 1 Unipolar:            •  Dysthymia  (depressed mood, 2 yrs) •  Major depressive disorder (twice as many women as men)  Bipolar: •  Cyclothymia •  Bipolar I  (at least 1 manic attack) •  Bipolar II  (one or more hypomanic episodes)

  29. Depression 2 --------------------------------------------------- Model  Diatheses + Personality + Life Events --->Depression  Biological Diathesis, e.g., genes, neurotransmitters  Psychological Diatheses, e.g., early loss of parent  Personality traits:  oral dependent personality, internal attributional style, learned helplessness  Negative life events: e.g., divorce, failure, health

  30. Psychotherapy

  31. Psychotherapy Questions • What is psychotherapy? • How does psychotherapy differ from talking with a friend about your troubles? • Does psychotherapy work? How do we know it works? • What percentage of people will get better without psychotherapy? Spontaneous remission, placebo effects

  32. Psychotherapy cont. • How does psychotherapy compare to medications? • Are some types of psychotherapy better than other types? • What factors predict success? Therapist variables vs client variables • Is psychotherapy good for everyone?

  33. Psychotherapy cont. • How important is the therapeutic relationship? • Outcome studies vs process studies • Common vs specific factors

  34. Def. Butler & Strupp • Psychotherapy is the “systematic use of a human relationship for therapeutic purposes”. Techniques cannot be separated from the human relationship; techniques are interpersonal events inevitably linked to expectations and beliefs. One person trying to help “heal” another.

  35. Psychotherapy • How does it differ from what a friend does? In many ways it doesn’t. • What ingredients are common to all types of therapy and what are specific to particular types of therapy? • Can we determine what is responsible for change? For success?

  36. Best known types of therapy • Psychodynamic • IPT • Humanistic (client-centered), Rogers • Existential (Rollo May) Counselors. • Behavior therapies • Cognitive therapies, Beck, Ellis (REBT) • Family Systems • Group

  37. Some additional types--less well-studied and less well-regarded • Gestalt: Fritz Perls • Janov (1924): Primal Therapy • Eric Berne: TA-Games Analysis • Reich: Bioenergic therapy • Jungian analysis

  38. Common vs. Specific Factors • How are all types of psychotherapy alike?

  39. Some common factors(Non-specific ingredients) • Characteristics of a “good clinician”. Warm, sympathetic person, unconditional positive regard, supportive, empathetic, good role model, responsible, non-judgmental, opportunity for catharsis, provides social-emotional support,good rapport, good advice/coaching, hope, encouragement

  40. Some specific factors • Transference • Interpretation • Free association • Desensitization • Empty chair • Challenging assumptions • Homework exercises • Role play

  41. Insight vs Action • Focus on past or present • How important is the therapeutic alliance?, what is the role of the therapist • Is the goal to have insight or to change thinking and behavior? • Is the focus on emotion, cognitions, behavior, unconscious conflicts, symptoms? What is most imp.?

  42. Client variables • Intelligence/education • Ability to introspect • Motivated to change (prob. most imp.) • Confidence and trust in the therapist • Maybe middle class, young, attractive, share the values of the therapist. (Client variables are more important to success than therapist variables)

  43. Research on Psychotherapy • How do you define success? • Placebo controls (wait-list) • Medications only • Sloan study, Temple study, Vanderbilt study. • NIMH

  44. General Information about Treatment 1. People with the most serious disorders probably need medication and/or ECT. (Schizophrenia, Bipolar, Unipolar with psychotic features, OCD) 2. People with mild disorders seem to improve significantly by seeing a professional. Type of training and type of therapy do not matter much. Why? Client variables more important than therapist variables for this group. 3. Type of therapy matters for moderate to severe problems.

  45. Treatment cont. 4. Cognitive behavior therapy appears to work best for moderate to severe depression. Interpersonal therapy OK. IPT 5. Behavior therapy and cognitive behavior therapy work best for most anxiety disorders. 6. Somatoform disorders- hard to treat. Combinations of therapy.

  46. General Information about Treatment 7. Dissociative disorders. Hypnosis plus psychodynamic-based therapies. 8. Meaning of life issues: Humanists/existential therapies helpful 9. Eating Disorders: Combinations including Family Therapy

  47. Treatment cont. 10. Personality Disorders: in general therapy doesn’t work--neither does anything else. Recent progress with borderlines 11. Schizophrenia: in general, therapy does not help. Medications plus controlled environment. Teaching family how to live with patient helps. Advice: Don’t just accept the statement from a therapist who tells you he or she is "eclectic". Most therapists identify with an orientation and are trained in a particular orientation. Many do use various techniques but most have a primary identification that matters a great deal.

  48. Insanity Defense 1 Mens Rea (Guilty Mind or Evil Intent) 1843: M’Nagten Rule (Right from Wrong) late 1800’s:   Irresistible Impulse 1954: Durham Test: Product of Defect (too broad) 1955: ALI:  American Law Institute  “A person is not responsible for criminal conduct if at the time of such conduct as a result of mental disease or defect he lacks substantial capacity either to appreciate the criminality (wrongfulness) of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law.”

  49. Insanity Defense 2 • ALI was widely used until after Hinckley (1981) Then “Unable to Conform” removed 1983: APA “...as a result of mental disease or mental retardation, he was unable to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct at the time of his conduct” ---Used in all Federal Courts and about 1/2 of all State Courts. The rest use ALI of have abolished insanity plea altogether (Idaho, Montana, Utah).

  50. Insanity Defense 3 2/3 of those acquitted are diagnosed with schizophrenia with a history of hospitalization. Less than 1% of the defendants plead insanity; less than 1/4 are successful. Alternatives:  • Guilty but mentally ill (Georgia) • Guilty with diminished capacity California Twinkie Defense.  In San Francisco, Dan White killed Mayor Moscone and City Supervisor Harvey Milk. Convicted of manslaughter.

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