Mental Disorders
Chapter 16
Problems in Identifying Mental Disorders
MENTAL DISORDER: a disturbance in a person’s emotions, thought processes, or behavior that results in: serious and relatively prolonged
distress and/or impairment in the ability to function
Not simply a normal response to some event in the person’s environment
Not explainable as an effect of poverty, prejudice or other social force that prevents the person from behaving adaptively
Categorizing and Diagnosing Mental Disorders
VALIDITY: the degree to which the disorders identified are clinically meaningful; that is, the degree to which the diagnostic labels predict real-world behaviors and treatment outcomes
Labeling an individual can be harmful Blinds you to other qualities
the person may have Can reduce their self-esteem Can interfere with the
individual’s ability to cope with their environment
RELIABILITY: the degree to which different diagnosticians, all trained in the use of the diagnostic system, reach the same conclusions when they independently diagnose the same individuals
The Brain Is Involved in All Mental Disorders
All thoughts, emotions and behaviors are products of the brain.
The role of the brain is most obvious in chronic mental disorders—that is, they stay with you for life once they appear Autism Down Syndrome Alzheimer’s Disease
Amyloid plaques
A Framework for Thinking About Multiple Causes of Mental Disorders
• Those conditions that are in place well before the onset of a mental disorder and that make the person susceptible to the disorder
Predisposing Causes
• The events that most immediately bring on a mental disorder in a person who is sufficiently predisposed for the disorder
Precipitating Causes
• Those consequences of a mental disorder—such as the way other people treat the person who has it—that help keep the disorder going once it begins
Perpetuating Causes
Anxiety Disorders Class of disorders in which fear or anxiety is the prominent system.
Generalized anxiety disorder
Obsessive-compulsive disorder - anxiety disorder characterized by two phenomena:
- Obsessions: disturbing thoughts that intrude repeatedly on a person’s consciousness
- Compulsions: a repetitive action that helps to alleviate the obsession
Panic disorder - Mental disorder characterized by the repeated occurrence of panic attacks at unpredictable times and with no clear relationship to environmental events.
- Panic attack: intense feeling of terror, which usually lasts several minutes, and is accompanied by signs of high physiological arousal
Phobias - mental disorder characterized by a strong, irrational fear of some particular category of object or event
Post-traumatic stress disorders - a mental disorder that is directly and explicitly tied to a particular traumatic incident or set of incidents that the affected person has experienced
Depressive Disorders
Mood• Prolonged emotional state that influences a person’s
thoughts and behavior
Depression• Prolonged sadness, self-blame, loss of hope, a sense of
worthlessness, and absence of pleasure
Major Depression• Mental disorder characterized by severe depression that
lasts essentially without remission for at least two weeks
Dysthymia• Mental disorder characterized by feelings of depression that
are less severe than those in major depression but which last for at least a two-year period
Cognitive & Biological Factors
Hopelessness theory:
1. The person assumes that the negative event will have catastrophic consequences
2. The person assumes that the negative event reflects something negative about himself or herself
3. The person attributes the cause of the negative event to something that is stable and global
Suffering stressful experiences predispose one to develop a depressive episode
Genes partly predisposes one to develop depression
Depression may be partly due to dysregulation of serotonin or norepinephrine in the brain, and increased release of cortisol
Bipolar Disorders
• Mood disorders that are characterized by episodes of abnormally high mood (mania) and abnormally low mood (depression)
Bipolar Disorders
• The most severe type of bipolar disorder, characterized by at least one episode of mania and one episode of major depression
Bipolar I Disorder
• The type of bipolar disorder in which the manic phase is less extreme than it is in Bipolar I Disorder and is referred to as hypomania
Bipolar II Disorder
The Manic Condition
Mania is characterized by euphoria, elevated self-esteem, increased talkativeness, decreased need for sleep and increased energy
Bipolar disorders have been linked with creativity
Schizophrenia
NEGATIVE SYMPTOMS: a lack of or reduction in expected behaviors, thoughts, feelings and drives Lack of speech Flattened affect Loss of basic drives such as
hunger Anhedonia
DELUSIONS: a false belief held in the face of compelling evidence to the contrary Persecution Being controlled Grandeur HALLUCINATIONS: false sensory perceptions Auditory: hearing voices
POSITIVE SYMPTOMS:
SCHIZOPHRENIA: a serious class of mental disorder that is characterized by disrupted perceptual and other thought processes, often including hallucinations and delusions• Disorganized thought and
speech, Echolalia, Neologisms
Genes & Environmental Contributions to Schizophrenia
Increased genetic relatedness increases probability of presenting the disorder (1.1% population rate)
• Identical twin : 48%
• Fraternal twin: 17%
• Non-twin sibling: 9%
• Both parents: 46%
• One parent: 13%
• Grandparent: 5%
The prenatal environment (malnutrition, birth problems, head injury)
Stressful life events can precipitate schizophrenia and exacerbate its symptoms
Children of parents who communicate in a disorganized, disjointed or highly emotional manner were more likely to develop schizophrenia