Psychological Models of Addiction Flashcards

1
Q

What are the core features of addictive behaviour?

A
  • Salience (importance/dominance)
  • Mood modification (rush and escape)
  • Tolerance
  • Withdrawal
  • Conflict (interpersonal, intra-psychic, loss of control)
  • Relapse
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2
Q

What are the different models which attempt to explain addiction?

A

Moral Model - people become addicted due to weakness

Dispositional Disease Model - disease causes patient to have no restraint from addiction. Can only cure disease by complete abstinence

Personality Model - patient has low self esteem and poor impulse control

Bion Model - person craves warmth/safety/protection like that of a mother (try to find this in their addiction)

Biological/Medical - addictive substances thought to change brain structure and impede decision making

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3
Q

What evidence supports the biological/medical model of addiction?

A
  • Addiction = 50% heritability

- And proof that discrete neural circuits are involved in different stages of addiction

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4
Q

What neural circuit is involved in the initial binge/intoxication stage of addiction?

A

Ventral-Tegmental Area (VTA)

Ventral striatum

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5
Q

What are the limitations of the medical model?

A
  • Medical treatments effectively reduce harm BUT are less effective in promoting abstinence
  • Addiction = primarily a disorder of behaviour (compulsivity and impulsivity)
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6
Q

What part of the brain is associated with the withdrawal and negative effect of addiction?

A

amygdala

this part of the brain craves use of the substance to get rid of withdrawal feeling

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7
Q

What part of the brain is involved in the Preoccupation/anticipation of addictive substance?

A

Cortex
hippocampus
insula
cingulate gyrus

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8
Q

Patients often describe the anticipation of taking a drug/addictive substance is better than actually using the drug itself. TRUE/FALSE?

A

TRUE

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9
Q

What is the difference between Associative Learning and Instrumental Learning?

A

Associative Learning - Ability to associate any stimuli with a pleasurable experience if they are paired together

Instrumental Learning - Positive reinforcement by being given reward

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10
Q

What is the difference between positive and negative punishment?

A

Positive - (adding something in)
=> A patients partner shouting at them for using drugs is a positive punishment

Negative (taking something away)
=> Losing family/friends due to use of drugs
=> This type can have opposite effect and cause patients to use more

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11
Q

What group of patients is most at risk of drug overdose?

A

Patients who have just come out of prison
=> their tolerance has decreased during stay
=> if they go back to using same high dose, they will overdose and have high risk of dying

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12
Q

What is a habit?

A

An acquired behaviour pattern regularly followed until it becomes almost involuntary
=> AUTOMATIC

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13
Q

How does addiction influence cognitive function?

A

Attention bias - causes patients to notice things associated with their substance of choice

Memory bias - patients remember the good parts of using substance, but pre-frontal cortex shuts down and does not remind them of the bad parts

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14
Q

What type of thinking do we want patients to use when regarding their addiction?

A

NOT AUTOMATIC

  • don’t want patients to act on impulse
  • slow/ deliberate/ effortful
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15
Q

What are the two main functions that patients with addictions try to get out of their addictive behaviour?

A
  • “Feel Good” factor

- Escape/avoidance

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16
Q

What thinking “errors” can be seen to present in addiction?

A

“It’s a treat” (permission-giving)

“It’s only one” (minimisation)

“I haven’t used for a whole week!” (rationalisation)

“I can use and stay in control” (denial)

“She made me angry so I had to use” (blaming)

17
Q

What is the Biopsychosocial Model of addiction?

A

Interaction between:

  • biological factors (e.g. physical health, genetics),
  • psychological factors (e.g. mental health)
  • social factors (e.g. finances, social support etc)
  • Holistic approach, no factors = dominant
18
Q

What biological/physical factors are involved in addiction?

A
  • Current non-prescribed OR prescribed drug use
  • Physical dependency (Withdrawal /Tolerance)
  • Drug use Hx (+/- treatment for it)
  • Injecting
  • High risk sexual behaviour
  • General physical health
  • Treatment goals (and drug use goals)
19
Q

What psychological factors are involved in the biopsychosocial model?

A
  • personal / developmental history
  • Functional analysis of current drug use
  • Beliefs about drug use
  • Coping skills
  • Cognitive functioning
  • Past Psych health/ usu of services
  • Psychological treatment goals
20
Q

What social factors are addressed in the biopsychosocial model?

A
Relationships
Housing
Employment
Financial
Legal
Social treatment goals
21
Q

What categories are involved in the FORMULATION of an addiction history?

A

Predisposing Factors - adverse childhood events
e.g. trauma, parent separation, bullying, ADHD/ASD diagnosis

Precipitating Factors - current triggers
e.g. Friends overdosing, relationship breakdown

Maintaining Factors - causing it to go on for longer
e.g. family conflict, spending time with other users

Protective
e.g. Good family relationship/support network

22
Q

Why are emotions such as anger a potential cause of drug use in patients trying to be abstinent?

A

Emotions like anger can cause physiological symptoms of withdrawal via anxiety

=> patient cant tell it is anxiety and not withdrawal
=> accepts craving and uses drugs