Schizophrenia: interactionist approach Flashcards

1
Q

summarise the interactionist approach to schizophrenia

A
  • Acknowledges biological, psychological and societal factors in the development of schizophrenia.
  • Biological = genetic vulnerability and neurochemical and neurological abnormality.
  • Psychological = stress resulting from life events and daily hassles, including poor quality interactions in the family.
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2
Q

what is the Diathesis-stress model

A
  • A genetic vulnerability to schizophrenia and a stress-trigger are necessary to develop schizophrenia.
  • One or more underlying factors make a person vulnerable but the onset of the condition is triggered by stress.
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3
Q

what is Meehl’s Model on Schizophrenia

A
  • believed schizophrenia was the result of a single ‘schizogene’.
  • if a person doesn’t have the schizogene then no amount of stress would lead to schizophrenia.
    -> However, in carriers of the gene, chronic stress through childhood and adolescence, particularly a schizophrenic mother, could result in schizophrenia.
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4
Q

What is the Modern Understanding of the Diathesis Stress Model (Read)

A
  • there is no single ‘schizogene’.
  • Read et al. (2001) -> proposed a neurodevelopmental model in which early trauma alters the developing brain.
    -> E.g. The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal system (HPA) becomes over-active and the person is more vulnerable to later stress.
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5
Q

Explain how schizophrenia would be treated with the interactionist approach

A
  • acknowledges both biological and psychological factors and is compatible with both types of treatment.
  • Model combines antipsychotics with psychological therapies such as CBT.
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6
Q

(+) Provide evidence for the role of vulnerability and triggers (Tienari)

A
  • Tienari (2004) investigated combination of genetic vulnerability and parenting style (the trigger).
  • child-rearing style of high levels of criticism and conflict and low levels of empathy was implicated in the development of schizophrenia but only for the children with high genetic risk.
  • suggests both genetic vulnerability and family stress are important in development of schizophrenia.
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7
Q

(-) Explain how the original diathesis-stress model is over simplistic (Houston)

A
  • Houston (2008) childhood sexual trauma emerged as a vulnerability factor whilst cannabis was a trigger.
    -> shows the old idea of diathesis as biological and stress as psychological is over-simple.
  • Stress can come in many forms not just dysfunctional parenting.
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8
Q

(+) give evidence which supports the combination of different treatments (Tarrier)

A
  • Tarrier (2004) 315 patients were randomly allocated to a medication + CBT group, medication + supportive counselling or a control group.
  • Patients in the two combination groups showed lower symptom levels than control.
  • This and other studies suggest there is clear advantage to adopting an interactionist approach.
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9
Q

(-) what is the treatment-causation fallacy (Turkington)

A
  • Turkington argued there is a good logical fit between the interactionist approach and using combining treatments.
  • However -> combining psychological and biological treatments is more effective, but it does not necessarily mean that the interactionist approach is correct.
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