Week 4/5 - adult externalising disorders Flashcards

1
Q

What are some of the criteria for being diagnosed with Gambling Disorder (4 or more over 12 months)?

A
  1. Restless/irritable
  2. Preoccupied
  3. Tried by can’t stop
  4. Loss
  5. Tolerance
  6. Lying
  7. Bailed out
  8. Chases losses
  9. Gambles to escape
    Note… mild (4-5), moderate (6-7), severe (8-9)
    - Not part of manic episode
    - Specifiers: episodic (between several months) or persistent (multiple years)
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2
Q

How is gambling similar to an addiction diagnosis?

A
  1. Loss of control
  2. Preoccupation, urges, pathological “wanting”
  3. Negative impact on major areas of life
  4. Major impact on mood, judgment and insight
  5. Tolerance/withdrawal
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3
Q

What are some associated features/cognitive distortions we see with gambling disorder?

A
Associated features:
-	increased sensation seeking
-	deficits in decision making
-	higher motor impulsivity
-	slower contingency learning
-	more perseverative errors
-	altered punishment and reward sensitivity
-	gambling related crimes
       o	non-violent, income generating offenses
       o	illegally gained $3,000-13,000
Cognitive distortions: 
o	Chances of winning
o	Illusions of control over outcomes
o	Gambling as source of income
o	Familiarity (favourite machine)
o	Justifications regarding continued gambling
o	Estimation of skills
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4
Q

What are the risk factors for developing gambling disorders?

A
  • male
  • young
  • low ses/disadvantaged
  • early exposure to gambling
  • availability
  • ACES (adverse childhood experiences)
  • Family history
  • Indigenous
  • PD
  • Nicotine addict
  • Deviant adolescent
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5
Q

What are some ways to assess for gambling:

A

QUESTIONNAIRES:

  • Problem gambling severity index
  • Brief problem gambling screen: 5 item, can detect low – high risk
  • South oaks gambling screen: short, self-scored, 16 items
  • Lie/bet questionnaire: 1 qn about lying and betting, ‘yes’ indicates GD tendency

STRUCTURED CLINICAL INTERVIEWS:

  • The diagnostic interview for gambling schedule - DIGS
  • The structured clinical interview for pathological gambling – SCI-PG
  • The world mental health composite international diagnostic interview – WMH-CIDI
  • The gambling behaviour interview – GBI
  • The gambling assessment module - GAM
  • Structured clinical interview for pathological gambling - SCIP

Note: structured interview benefits:

  • clinical judgement
  • improve accuracy of diagnosis
  • include additional questions across multiple domains
  • focus on impact, not just frequency and expenditure (legal, finance, social, physical, family, productivity, mental health)
  • Finding out about these follow up things helps with the referral and/or treatment plan
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6
Q

What are some things to be aware of when doing an gambling assessment:

A
  • be aware of the shame, secrecy and stigma
  • collateral information is a MUST (getting info from other sources)
  • can take several sessions to get the picture
  • ask for evidence (statements)
  • timelines and history help differentiate between other diagnoses (like bipolar, adhd etc)
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7
Q

What are the key features of impulse control disorders?

A
  • a failure to resist and impulse, drive or temptation to perform an act that is harmful to the person or to others.
  • Relief of mounting tension or arousal with the act
  • Repetitive or compulsive engagement in the behaviour despite adverse consequences
  • Diminishes control over the problematic area
  • Disturbances in the ability to regulate specific impulses not attributable to other DSM-5 diagnoses
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8
Q

Describe some features of pyromaniacs (diagnostic requirements):

A
  • deliberate/purposeful fire setting more than once
  • tension/aroused affect before the act
  • fascination/interesting/curiosity/attraction with fire and its contexts (paraphernalia, uses, consequences etc).
  • pleasure, gratification, or relief when setting fire or when witnessing, or participating in aftermath
  • not done for monetary gain, to conceal a crime, socio-political expression, to express anger/vengeance, to improve living circumstances, in response to hallucination, etc.
  • not better accounted for by other disorder (conduct, mania, APD).
  • More common in males
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9
Q

Describe some features of kleptomaniacs (diagnostic requirements):

A
  • recurrent failure to resist impulses to steal objects that are not needed for personal use or for their monetary sale
  • increasing sense of tension immediately before committing the theft
  • pleasure, gratification, or relief at the time of committing the theft
  • the stealing is not committed to express anger or vengeance and is not in response to a delusion or hallucination
  • the stealing is not better accounted for by conduct disorder, mania or APD.
  • Gender: 3-1 female-male
  • Person is usually law abiding otherwise
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10
Q

What are some features of intermittent explosive disorder?

A
  • Recurrent behavioural outbursts
    o Verbal aggression or physical aggression (no injury/damage) twice a week for 3 months
    OR
    o 3 outbursts within a year with damage/injury
  • Aggression is out of proportion
  • not pre-meditated
  • causes marked distress or impairment or financial/legal consequences
  • At least 6 years old
  • Not better explained by another disorder (conduct, mania, APD)
  • Rapid onset of outbursts, which last at least 30 mins
  • More common in males
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11
Q

Can adults have ADHD too or is it just children? Discuss this idea.

A
  • up to 70% of children/adolescents with ADHD will have symptoms into adulthood.
  • 20-64 years olds have shown 4.4% prevalence
  • can go unmanaged into adulthood
  • some evidence that it can onset in adulthood but need some symptoms before 12 to diagnose.
  • 85% of people with ADHD have comorbid disorders so diagnosis is hard
  • symptoms don’t differ into adulthood, just impact age appropriate things (work failure or injury, driving problems, relationship failure, risky sexual behaviour etc).
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