Lecture III Flashcards

1
Q

Assessment

A

Clinicians do tests, observations, interviews to summarize client’s symptoms

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2
Q

Diagnosis

A

Process through which the clinician gets a “summary classification” of the patient’s symptoms using a diagnostic manual such as DSM-5

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3
Q

Referral question

A

The first step in diagnosis where the problem is identified and summarized. Considerations: situational/pervasive, duration, prior attempts at treatment, effects, DSM

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4
Q

Comprehensive Assessment

A

Second step in diagnosis: can include general physical exam, neurological exam, neuropsychological exam

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5
Q

Neuropsychological exam

A

Assesses cognitive, perceptual, motor performance to assess if there is brain damage and to characterize level of cognitive functioning

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6
Q

Psychodiagnostic assessment

A

Assesses individual’s psychological presentation. Three common procedures: assessment interviews (structured/unstructured), clinical obs of behavior, psychological tests

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7
Q

Assessment interviews

A

Face-to-face where clinician obtains info on client’s situation, personality, behavior. Structured - less freedom but more reliability. Unstructured - more freedom to explore

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8
Q

Clinical observation of behavior

A

Ideally takes place in natural setting, but often in clinic or hospital. Rating scales can help increase validity

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9
Q

Two kinds of psychological tests

A

(1) Intelligence tests (WISC-IV, Stanford-Binet, WAIS-IV)

2) Personality tests (projective tests with unstructured stimuli, objective tests

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10
Q

Projective personality tests

A

Unstructured stimuli presented; patient must come up with meaning; believed to indicate unconscious. Includes Rorschach Inkblot Test, Thematic Apperception test, Sentence Completion test. Criticisms: inefficient, subjective, hard to score

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11
Q

Objective personality tets

A

Structured questionnaires; self-reports. Include MMPI. Advantages - cost effective, objective. Disadvantages: mechanistic, reduces complexity, self-report biases

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12
Q

Integrating assessment data

A

Data from various sources must be used to create a working model of the client’s condition

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13
Q

Assessment report components

A

Referral question, background information, behavioral observations, tests administered, test results, summaries, diagnostic impressions, recommendations

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14
Q

Ethical issues in assessment

A

Possible problems from cultural bias, theoretical orientation, underemphasis on external factors, insufficient validation, inaccurate data, premature evaluation

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15
Q

Classification pros and cons

A

Benefits: order, ability to communicate, statistical research, insurance.

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16
Q

Three models of classification

A

(1) Categorical - patient is healthy or disordered; no overlap
(2) Dimensional approach - there is a spectrum from superior functioning to absolutely impaired
(3) Prototypal - concept of an idealized combo of characteristics, some which patient may not have

17
Q

2 major classification systems for mental disorder

A

Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (DSM) and International classification of disease (ICD)

18
Q

DSM-IV Diagnosis - Axes

A

5 axes: (1) Syndromes or conditions

(2) Personality disorders, retardation
(3) General medical conditions
(4) Psychosocial and environmental
(5) Global assessment of functioning

19
Q

DSM-V Diagnosis - non-axial

A

Non-axial documentation of diagnosis with separate notations for important psychosocial and contextual factors, disability

20
Q

Why seek psychotherapy?

A

Believed that those who have psychological problems can learn more adaptive ways of perceiving, evaluating, and behaving

21
Q

Therapeutic relationships

A

Must be a working alliance, with collaborative relationship, agreement on goals, affective bond, clear communication, motivation

22
Q

Outcome assessment

A

Good ways to determine: therapist impression, client report, family/friend report, pre- vs post- treatment scores, measures of change in behavior. Though some conditions naturally resolve, therapy usually more effective. Sometimes can result in deterioration (boundary violations)