Clinical Psychology Flashcards

1
Q

ABNORMALITY V NORMALITY

What are the 4 different approaches to classifying abnormality

A

Statistical approach, normative approach, functional approach, distress-based approach

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

explain the statistical approach

A

attributes or behaviour that deviate from the statistical norm.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

good thing about it

A

offers objectivity and measurability

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

limitations- 3

A

1) measurement error- how accurate are the tests, different times of day for example. test retest reliability.
2) regression to the mean- normal fluctuation to go from extreme to normal is common
3) extreme values don’t always mean problems- what about high IQ for exampl
4) where do we draw the cut off

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

explain the normative approach

A

deviating from social norms is viewed as normal because acting in an acceptable way is seen as adaptive behaviour to thrive and survive in life.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

limitations- 3

A

1) intolerant of individual differences
2) social normals are constructed and arbitary anyway
3) this approach can lead to an abuse of power- soviet gulag example

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

explain the functional approach

A

a compromise between stats and norm- based on a person failing to function correctly to meet their personal needs/goals to survive. if you can’t- its seen as maladaptive behaviour

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

limitations- 3

A

1) someone who is maladaptive might not necessarily be abormal (murderers are maladaptive but that doesnt mean every murderer has a mental health condition)
2) assumes ‘universal needs’
3) expects conformity

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

good thing about the functional approach

A

this approach says its down to context, so being homeless isnt socially normal but it doesnt make you mentally ill, it compares you to people within that group. So one homeless person might not be functioning the same as another homeless person, who is in their reference group

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

explain the distress-based approach

A

based on an individuals distress or inability to cope with their experiences or problems. its about their own perception of normal (good thing)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

limitations- 3

A

1) lack of insight could be a problem- what if they’re a child
2) highly subjective. one person’s sadness is another’s depression.
3) danger of medicalizing/pathologising normal reactions to adverse events

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

what is the current view on classifying?

A

contemporary classification systems are informed by a combination of these perspectives

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

why is it important to classify things? 4 reasons

A

1) its important for aetiology and epidemiology- we need to study it systematically so we can know how to improve.
2) enables a shared language to recognise and treat
3) enables us to select appropriate treatments
4) enables us to evaluate different interventions
5) ) societal reasons, legal, financial etc- need diagnosis to support

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

where does classification come from

A

Emil Kraepelin. devised a way to classify mental disorders based on symptomatology- co-occurring symptoms. interviewed 100’s of patients. entered into the ICD (International classification of diseases) in 1939.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

when did the first DSM drop

A

1952

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

what parts are diagnostic schemes organised into

A

1) core criteria. must have a specific 2, aswell as 5 alltogether and for over 2 weeks.
2) symptoms must cause significant distress
3) can’t be attributed to drugs or other medical condition

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

advantages to the DSM- 5

A
  • specific criteria to diagnose similar conditions
  • provides criteria that can be applied systematically
  • the diagnostic criteria is theoretically neutral
  • takes functional impairment into consideration- you have to consider it a problem
  • advances in drugs and treatments and epidemiology
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
18
Q

disadvantages of the DSM

A
  • diagnosis is based on symptoms not aetiology
  • the illusion of explanation, being diagnosed doesnt mean we know the causes or how to treat it
  • different disorders have similar symptoms that need to be treated differently. danger of misdiagnosis
  • within category heterogeneity- even in the same diagnosis, the manifestations are completely different. putting people in categories doesnt account for severity
  • false positives- pathologising normal distress
  • labelling leads to stigmatisation and self-fulfilling prophecy
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
19
Q

ALTERNATIVES! what are the alternatives?

A

dimensional model, network models

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
20
Q

describe dimensional models

A

places mental disorders on a continuum, rather than categories. is on a chart with normal experiences.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
21
Q

good things about the dimensional models

A

accounts for severity! allows for overlapping traits, symptoms of psychosis and depression can be mapped together.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
22
Q

problems

A

again problems with cut offs, where is the line between normal and pathological

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
23
Q

what are some examples of the dimensional models

A

internalising/externalising dimensions. transdiagnostic psychosis-bipolar, transdiagnostic negative affectivity

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
24
Q

describe the internalising/externalising dimensions

A

disorders can be thought of as either internalising or externalising.
internalising- anxiety, depression, self-identity, socially awkward
externalising- hyperactivity, aggression, conduct problems, disruptive

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
25
Q

describe the transdiagnostic psychosis-bipolar,

A

all disorders can be mapped somewhere between these 2. high end is hallucinations and manic episodes and low end is nothing

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
26
Q

describe the transdiagnostic

negative affectivity

A

depressive, anxiety traits. scale where at high level you may have full range of common mental health problems. (SA, GAD, MDD, panic)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
27
Q

describe eyesenck’s personality dimensions

A

everyone is along the spectrum is introvert-extroverted and stable- unstable. suggests all humans have different personalities and these can be mapped between stable and unstable

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
28
Q

what is the network model perspective

A

fairly new, last 5 years- suggests that the way we have been thinking about psychopathology has been too simplistic. this says that psychological problems are a network of symptoms that co-occur in time

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
29
Q

what are the 4 phases of the network model

A

phase 1- Dormant network in stable state. potential for disorder but no symptoms
phase 2- Network activation. something happens to trigger certain symptoms.
phase 3- Symptoms spread. symptoms cause other symptoms.
phase 4- environmental trigger stops but symptoms keep influencing eachother in a mutually reinforcing network

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
30
Q

DEPRESSION

Define depression

A

a mood disorder involving emotional, motivational, behavioural, cognitive and physical aspects.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
31
Q

what do you have to have to diagnose it

A
5 or more symptoms over 2 weeks. one of them has to be an emotional characteristic.
IN SAD CAGES- 
in- interest lost in activities
s- sleep disturbed
a- appetite changes
d- depressed mood
c- concentration difficults
a- activity level change
g- guilt or worthlessness
e- energy loss
s- suicidal thoughts
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
32
Q

what is the controversy with this? ‘someone has gotlib- this is ridiculous’

A

Gotlib et al., 1995- why would we ignore those with 3-4 symptoms when its been shown that the level of distress and daily difficults is the same as someone with 5

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
33
Q

epidemiology- global burden. how much of worldwide disability does depression account for?

A

21.2%

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
34
Q

what did the 2013 global burden of disease study find

A

its the most prominent mental health condition, second leading cause of years lived with disability. primary driver of disability in 26 countries

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
35
Q

what did the lancet 2017 find

A

it is in the top 10 causes of death in all buy 4 countries

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
36
Q

‘Eiu, surely that can’t be true!’

A

Liu et al., 2019- there are 258 people living with it currently

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
37
Q

Suicide: how many suicides were there in 2014

A

6,222- 1 death every 2 hours

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
38
Q

what year was it the leading cause of death in men under 50

A

2014

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
39
Q

where in the world has the highest rates and where the lowest

A

highest- north east of england. london has the lowest- maybe to do with deprivation levels/opportunities.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
40
Q

how many people didnt contact a gp a year before suicide

A

72%

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
41
Q

prevalence in age?

A

steady rise from 16 to 50/60’s and then lowers as you hit 70’s

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
42
Q

depression by age and sex?

A

young women is 4 times as much as young men. older women is 6 times as much as men. Stansfeld et al., 2014- women have higher prevalence

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
43
Q

why is it difficult to measure prevalence?

A

lots of different measures are used and its often comorbid with other disorders (Moffit et al., 2017)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
44
Q

how does employment affect it?

A

being unemployed makes you more likely to have it and women still almost twice as likely

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
45
Q

central ideas for the psychodynamic/psychoanalytic theory of depression

A
  • importance of childhood experiences
  • get stuck in the early oral stage, do thinks like chew gum, smoke etc
  • people become vulnerable to depression if you needs are not met during the oral stage
  • depression is response to actual or symbolic loss
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
46
Q

why does freud think loss is so important to depression

A

thinks that experiencing loss leads to something called ‘introjection’ where the individual regresses to oral stage.
he says that natural loss causes feelings of loss, rejection and disappointment which makes you withdraw feelings from them and put them onto a new person.
he says that when on the depression pathway you refuse to accept the loss and the feelings of anger and disappointment are directed inwards and depression is caused.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
47
Q

good things about psycho

A
  • very influential
  • based on really detailed observations that are still used today
  • modern theories have actually adopted the idea that childhood experiences are really key
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
48
Q

bad things

A
  • there is not much evidence

- many people experience loss and no depression. this doesnt explain that

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
49
Q

what does it suggest in terms of the stress-diathesis model

A

that early experiences in childhood (whether orally fixed or not) are what create the vulnerability to depression

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
50
Q

who made some recent adaptations to psychoanalytic theory

A

robert hobson. a conversational model of therapy. he coined the ‘aloneness-togetherness’ approach which said you need to be comfortable in your own and in others company. said that as long as the person had had 1 significant relationship in their life then they could be treated. also placed massive importance on relationship with the self

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
51
Q

what are the central ideas to the interpersonal theories of depression. ‘you must get a job to maintain the coin’

A

Coyne, 1976- model is more about the maintenance of depression rather than the cause.
idea that-
1) depression arouses guilt, annoyance and eventual avoidance in those AROUND THE DEPRESSED PERSON.
2) this reinforces the idea for the depressed person they they are not loved
3) this results in increased distress and a behaviour-response pattern is established.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
52
Q

basic idea behind it

A

it is the actual behaviour of the depressed person that puts other people in the position that they start reinforcing the depressed persons view that they aint shit

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
53
Q

who explained the idea? ‘i dont want to joiner cos shes so depressing!’

A

Joiner et al., 1992- explained maintenance in terms of ‘excessive reassurance seeking’- incessantly seeking assurance that they’re loveable. and ‘negative feedback seeking’ tendency to actively seek criticism.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
54
Q

where does negative feedback seeking come from? ‘if you hit a swann they will fucking come for you’

A

‘Swann, 1990= people want interpersonal feedback that is consistent with their own views because it means they can predict and control their environment

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
55
Q

criticisms of interpersonal theories

A

the evidence is retrospective, its quite reasonable that depressed people would underestimate the support in their lives. also- are these two tendencies predispositions for getting depression or is it depression that causes these tendencies?

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
56
Q

describe attachement theory of depression

A

theory of mono-trophy (single attachment) if this is broken then you get depression. in terms of stress-diathesis- attachment is a very important diathesis. its the basis that makes them vulnerable to not being able to cope with alter life stressors.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
57
Q

what do they say healthy attachment does to avoid depression

A

you get responsive reactions when you cry, builds up a ‘secure base’ which allows infants to build up internral working model

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
58
Q

explain behavioural theory=

A

Lewinson 1976- you become depressed through lack of positive reinforcement if you lose something- bereavement, loss of job, relationship etc. the person then starts withdrawing, which leads to further reduction in reinforcement, create a cycle- behavioural vacuum

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
59
Q

what is evidence for this

A

depressed people have a lack of motivation= perhaps because it has stopped being reinforced?

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
60
Q

what 3 assumptions is it based on

A

1) low levels of response contingent (positive experiences)- act as a stimulus for depressive behaviour.
2) these low levels are a sufficient explanation for depression
3) the total amount of response-contingent reinforcement is made up of- number of potentially reinforcing events, availability of such events and finally, the behaviour of the individual in trying to get the reinforcement

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
61
Q

caveats of the behavioural theory

A

reductionist- only talks about environment, what about biological or cognitive aspects
deterministic- suggests our behaviour is completely controlled by environment, that if you experience loss then you will get depressed
what about people with great lives who just get depression
ignores nature- only nurture

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
62
Q

explain cognitive theory of depression

A

Beck, 1967- negative cognitive triad.

1) negative view of self
2) negative view of the world
3) negative view of the future

these views lead to cognitive bias, then to failure, then to loss and depression.

distorted thoughts and negative schemas influence what information we select, encode and evaluate.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
63
Q

how are negative schemas made

A

learned socially by watching family, or experiences that lead to maladaptive coping strategies

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
64
Q

how is it explained in context of the stress-diathesis model

A

diathesis= dysfunctional beliefs
stress= significant life event
leads to negative schemas, leads to becks cognitive triad

vulnerabilities come from experiences, genes and personality and lay dormant until life events activate them

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
65
Q

what are the bias’s that the triad leads to? alice sometimes over-magnifies all

A

Arbitrary interference- jumping to conclusions
Selective abstraction- abstracting info out of context and missing significant info
Overgeneralisation- make a small mistake and say you never do anything right
Magnification and minimisation- catastrophising events
All-or-nothing thinking- events are black or white, good or bad

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
66
Q

what is support for this theory?

A

Alloy et al., 1997- depressed people remember more negative info about themselves then positive.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
67
Q

what is still unclear about it

A

whether depression causes them or they cause depression

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
68
Q

what did brown and harris investigate?

A
Brown and Harris 1978- studied onset of depression in 458 south london women. 
found massive class effects- working class w children 4 times as likely as middle class w children.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
69
Q

how many women with depression had not experiences adverse life events

A

only 4 out of 37

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
70
Q

what were the 3 major factors that effected it

A

1) protective factors such as education, employment, good relationship with husband
2) vulnerability factors such as family history, loss of mother before 11, lack of confiding relationship
3) provoking agents such as acute and ongoing stress that results in hopelessness and grief

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
71
Q

ANXIETY!!!

When do we need anxiety?

A

Our brains have cognitive biases that are designed to jump to conclusions- like why we’d jump out of the way of a moving car. but if we start jumping every time we see a car thats when it becomes a problem.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
72
Q

what 3 things make it an issue?

A

proportionality, frequency, disruptiveness

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
73
Q

PREVALENCE ‘kester, my mad fat diary’

A

Kessler et al., 2005- there is a 28% lifetime prevalence

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
74
Q

‘roanoke series of AHS was so morbid’

A

Kroenke et al., 2007- very likely to be co-morbid with other disorders

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
75
Q

‘simon says was played at school, they miss a lot of school’

A

Simone et al., 1995- anxiety poses high social and health costs to sufferer and government

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
76
Q

‘they are anxty, wittchen turn leads to hospitalisation’

A

often end up in hospital because of the somatic symptoms

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
77
Q

anxiety and age

A

looks very different in children, repetitive play etc.
phobias and GAD more common in older adults
social anxiety and panic disorder get less severe when you get older

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
78
Q

gender and anxiety

A

women are twice as likely to get GAD, panic disorder and PTSD, and phobias. men and women have the same likelihood of OCD and social anxiety

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
79
Q

why might this be? ‘kubrick was really sexist’

A

Pimlott-kubiak et al., 2013– women tend to experience more trauma due to socio-cultural factors, sexual assault.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
80
Q

class and anxiety

A

less income associated with higher risk of anxiety. they have higher psychological stress and less support

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
81
Q

why might this be? ‘booka, they have less to learn’

A

Buka et al., 2001= more likely to experience trauma, adverse life events and less resources to cope with anxiety

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
82
Q

the 9 disorders in the DSM

A
  1. separation anxiety
  2. social anxiety
  3. GAD
  4. specific phobias
  5. selective mutism
  6. panic disorder
  7. agoraphobia
  8. substance induced
  9. unspecified
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
83
Q

what criteria must be present for a diagnosis of a specific phobia? 7

A

1) marked fear
2) immediate fear
3) object or situ is actively avoided
4) fear is out of proportion of actual threat
5) fear persists for more than 6 months
6) causes clinically significant distress/impairment
7) not better explained by another disorder- fear of spiders, paranoia not phobia?

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
84
Q

what are the most common phobias

A

height, snakes, water, social, dentist, injection

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
85
Q

was supposed to be further up but what are the common characteristics of anxiety disorder?

A

physiological symptoms of panic
bias towards negative/threatening information
worrying, jumping to conclusions

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
86
Q

what disorders are within ocd

A

trichotillomania
hoarding
body dysmorphia
excoriation

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
87
Q

what is ocd characterised by

A

obsessions (intrusive and recurring thoughts that are disturbing or uncontrollable) or compulsions (repetitive behaviour patterns that the individual feels driven to do to prevent bad things from happening)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
88
Q

what is PTSD characterised by

A

PTSD is a set of persistent anxiety-based symptoms that occur after witnessing a traumatic event

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
89
Q

how does PTSD work?

A

1) exposure to trauma
2) intrusive symptoms
3) avoidance
4) negative alterations in cognition and mood
5) increased arousal

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
90
Q

CO-MORBITIY WITHIN. ‘rhymes with frown’ how comorbid are GAD, OCD and social anxiety

A

Brown, 1996-
GAD- 83% comorbid
social- 45% comorbid
OCD- 56% comorbid

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
91
Q

4 advantages to diagnosis

A

1) reasonably reliable and valid
2) makes communication between professionals easier
3) reassuring to be labelled? reduces self-efficacy
4) improves access to services/resources

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
92
Q

4 disadvantages to diagnosis

A

1) labelling reduces self-efficacy, dont feel like they need to help selves anymore?
2) pathologising normal reactions?
3) high comorbidity, misdiagnosis danger
4) anxiety is common in all disorders

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
93
Q

explain the psychoanalytic theory of specific phobias

A

its to do with hidden, unconscious fear of childhood conflict. hard to substantiate but it is thought that phobias do have something to do with avoiding more troubling life challenges. little hans

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
94
Q

explain the learning theory ideas behind specific phobias,

A

Watson and Rayner, they made a baby anxious with a mental bar so they’ve shown how fear of things can be learnt.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
95
Q

explain how classical and operant conditioning can create anxiety

A

you have a panic attack (unconditioned response) at work (unconditioned stimulus) and then become fearful of work (conditioned stimulus). then, the reward of not being scared when you’re not at work reinforces the behaviour and it is maintained

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
96
Q

learning theory intervention

A

based around idea of extinction, gradual decrease of conditioned response. either exposure leads to extinction or you over-learn a new conditioned response

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
97
Q

what is the only rule in extinction

A

dont walk away when youre anxious because the reward of not going will reinforce the behaviour. could be used as evidence!

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
98
Q

problems with conditioning theory

A

1) assumes that a bad event has happened, not everyone can trace it back like that
2) not all traumatic events cause phobias
3) doesnt explain why there are generally agreed things which are phobic
4) incubation- when exposure doesnt work

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
99
Q

evolutionary accounts for phobias- ‘selig was fucked up’

A

Seligman- biological preparedness, evolutionary selection processes have meant we have biological predispositions to be fearful of things that could have been a threat to us in the past

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
100
Q

evidence for this- ‘tarzan, monkeys’

A

Cook and Mineka- bred a fear of snakes into rhesus monkeys. shows it can be bred into out biology

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
101
Q

what has evolution created and why is this different to before

A

evolution has created learned threat, out old brain was for relationship seeking, behaviours and emotions- the immediate responses you dont think much about. now we have learned threat that we ruminate on. imagination and rumination of the worst outcomes. treatments are all based on relaxing this phenomenon

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
102
Q

criticisms of the evolutionary approach

A

it is all post hoc and very easy to just justify links- how do we know that selection processes were important for phobic content.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
103
Q

what is the main theory behind becks cognitive theory

A

it is not the thoughts that give us anxiety, its the processing!

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
104
Q

How does this happen

A

the meaning we gives things gives them the emotional impact, the meanings we give are linked to your internal beliefs (schemas), which are linked to your early experiences

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
105
Q

what is the difference between behavioural and cognitive theory

A

behavioural- about consequences after behaviour. cognitive is about the event- the thoughts you have of it, and then the behaviour

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
106
Q

what are the 5 steps to becks cognitive theory

A

1) early experiences
2) create schemas, core beliefs
3) something happens to activate schema!!
4) information processing becomes distorted and negative automatic thoughts come
5) maintenance cycle of emotion, thoughts and behaviour

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
107
Q

example of schema becoming assumptions

A

belief- i hate cats

schema- if i see a cat i will die

108
Q

how are anxiety schemas made?

A

overestimating danger and underestimating coping abilities

109
Q

how do anxiety schemas differ from disorder to disorder. panic, gad and social

A

panic- anxiety over the symptoms themselves
social- anxiety over rejection
gad- beliefs about general coping abilities

110
Q

what is unhelpful thought content characteristics

A
  • the manifestation of the negative schemas
  • logical in the schema but not outside it
  • in or out of conscious awareness
  • can be images or verbal
111
Q

what is the cognitive model of panic. 7 steps

A
1- misinterpret bodily symptoms (panic attack)
2- feel scared or anxious
3- pounding heart
4- think youre having a heart attack
5- have actual panic attack
6- get fear of panic attacks
7- cycle repeats
112
Q

‘miss clark used to have panic attacks when i was in her class’

A

people misinterpret bodily functions and thats what causes panic attacks

113
Q

what are the safety behaviours that are used

A

avoidance, escapism, safety seeking

114
Q

‘reminds me of a land rover, which are spenny’

A

Rovner et al., 1993- its the most expensive psychological problem

115
Q

‘m&m, fat people are selective of them’

A

cognitive bias’s make you selectively attending to threatening stimuli. anxiety is based on cognitive bias’s!

116
Q

‘tabby had irrational fear of prom’

A

Chapman 1997- 60.2% of the general pop have ‘unreasonable fears’

117
Q

‘i dont belieb this’

A

Lieb et al., 2000- people who have social anxiety are more likely to have phobic parents than non phobic. silly tho cos could be all to do with modelling and growing up around them!

118
Q

PSYCHOSIS

What is psychosis?

A

a state of being out of touch with reality

119
Q

what are the most common diagnosis within psychosis

A

schizophrenia
delusional
schizoprheniform
- although theres not evidence to say these are totally separate disorders

120
Q

what are the two main categories they can be split into?

A

1) schizophrenia spectrum disorders- non affective.

2) affective disorders- mood disorders like bipolar

121
Q

what 3 categories are the symptoms of psychosis split into

A

thoughts and perceptions,
feelings and emotions,
behaviours

122
Q

what is in thoughts and perceptions

A

hallucinations
delusions
disorganised thinking
poor concentration

123
Q

what is in emotions and feelings

A
anhedonia
low energy
irritation/elation
depression
anxiety
124
Q

what is in behaviours

A
withdrawal/isolation
reduced speech
irritability
aggression
impulsivity
125
Q

what are positive symptoms

A

presence of undesirable things- hallucinations, delusions etc. excess of normal function

126
Q

what are negative symptoms

A

absence of desirable things- anhedonia, apathy, flat effect. diminution of normal function

127
Q

key points on hallucinations

A
  • can be auditory or visual, auditory most common
  • demand hallucinations- ordering behaviours, sometimes violent
  • harshly critical
128
Q

what do hallucinations cause

A

difficulty in ‘reality monitoring’, hard to know if they’re internal or external

129
Q

‘georgia o’keefe, mad artists’

A

O’Keefe et al., 2002-, found that the speech perception and speech generation parts of the brain become disconnected

130
Q

what is the sometimes in the content of the voices

A

many schizo sufferers have experiences sexual abuse, sometimes reflected

131
Q

‘sounds like foghorn, which would be an unmissable cue’

A

Cleghorn et al., 1992- found that 70% of schizo sufferers have auditory hallucinations

132
Q

what are delusions

A

abnormal beliefs held with great conviction
really hard to argue against
seem bizarre to others

133
Q

‘rhymes with layer, under the layer of delusion there is sense’

A

Maher, 2001- said that no matter how bizarre, patient usually can see how illogical deep down

134
Q

so if they know deep down its not true then why does it happen? ‘dads under the delusion he shouldnt be on the dole but he knows deep down’ definition

A

Frith and Dolan, 2002- delusions are the inability to integrate perceptual info (what the voices are telling you) with your prior knowledge (what you know deep down) even though logical thought processes are still in tact

135
Q

what are the two main themes in delusions

A

1) delusions of grandiose

2) delusions of paranoia/ persecution

136
Q

what are delusions related to which is key

A

information-processing biases, people jumping to conclusions without sufficient evidence

137
Q

what are the other common delusions

A

delusions of control- aliens
delusions of reference- radio is addressing you
nihilistic- you dont exist, something terrible will happen
erotomanic= someone loves you

138
Q

what is thought disorder?

A

its assessed through someones external speech. 6 signs that someone has it are

139
Q

what are the 6 signs of though disorder

A

1) neologisms
2) word salads
3) clanging
4) derailment
5) tangentiality
6) poverty of content

140
Q

what did thought disorder prompt

A

to look into actual thinking processes in schizophrenics. found that it actually not their reasoning that is wrong, its their expression. its also more prominent when people are talking about emotional topics

141
Q

‘saying tits in western bank would be impulsive’

A

Titone et al., 2002- sufferers struggle to inhibit associations between phrases so they just say whatever comes to mind

142
Q

what is the psychosis spectrum

A

the old view was that these symptoms were super rare, severe and impossible to recover from. we now know you make substantial recovery. there are those who simply carry on with life and dont need psychological help (support idea of a spectrum)

143
Q

prevalence of symptoms- hallucinations, delusions ‘the wizard was an illusion’, paranoia, ‘poultry, paranoid vegans’ bipolar spectrum,

A
  • hallucinations, Tein- 10-15%
  • delusions, Van Os et al- 12%
  • paranoia, Poulton- 12.6%
  • bipolar spectrum, Judd and Akiskal- 6.4%
144
Q

what story supports the continuum idea

A

the lady who just decided that she was an ancient greek and it made her more comfortable. sometimes accepting the delusions is the best way

145
Q

diagnostic criteria for schizophrenia, brief psychotic disorder

A

more than 6 months, less than 1 month

146
Q

briefly explain brief psychotic disorder

A

happens within 2 weeks. accounts for 9% of onset of psychosis, usually associated with emotional turmoil

147
Q

what did akiskal et al., 2000 say about bipolar

A

that there a spectrum of bipolar

148
Q

what is it characterised by

A

episodes of mania, hypomania, mixed episodes, euthymic, mixed episodes

149
Q

‘iceburg- ppl dying on the titanic’

A

Newburg et al., 2008- has relatively high mortality and relapse rates

150
Q

9 symptoms of mania

A
1- elation
2- impulsivity
3- goal-directed behaviour
4- fast speech
5- sexual promiscuity
6- no sleep
7- distractibility
8- drugs and drink
9- flight of ideas
151
Q

what did johnson say about manis?

A

Johnson et al., 2011= mania being the opposite to depression is a myth. mixed episodes are common. positive and negative symptoms fluctuate independently

152
Q

PREVALENCE

What is the risk of developing bipolar, and of any psychotic disorder

A

1%, 3%

153
Q

where has the highest rate

A

disadvantaged suburban areas

154
Q

when is the most common time for diagnosis

A

late teens to late twenties. men have earliest onset age

155
Q

what are the problems with diagnosing psychotic disorders

A
  • disagreement amongst professionals
  • symptoms dont always neatly fit
  • diagnosis doesnt predict cause or course
  • doesnt suggest treatments will work
156
Q

‘swans are graceful, reminds me of continuum rather than set stages’

A

Swann, 2006- said that continuum is much more helpful because the bipolar and schizo symptoms overlap so much they only seem to be distinguished by the severity of symptoms

157
Q

what do we use instead of diagnostic categories now

A

formulation/explanatory models

158
Q

why?

A
  • they provide theoretical and conceptual framework to understand individual cases with.
  • offer a basis for internvetions
  • enable communication to understand everything- causes and all!
159
Q

what are the explanatory models?

A

the stress vulnerability model and cognitive theories

160
Q

what is the stress vulnerability model. is it not environmental to throw everything in zu-bin’

A

Zubin et al., 1992- biological and environmental factors interact to create psychosis.

underlying vulnerabilities can be biological or psychological

161
Q

what 3 symptoms do these cognitive theories explain-

A

paranoid delusions, thought disorder and delusions

162
Q

paranoid delusions ‘does colin firth know what his characters are thinking’

A

Firth 1994- paranoid delusions associated with T.O.M deficits. Says that people with delusions can’t understand the mental health and intentions of others, and this makes them believe someone is hiding something from then

163
Q

‘they think people are lying’ evidence

A

Lysaker and Olesek 2011- T.O.M deficits are a key marker in schizophrenics

164
Q

Thought disorder ‘dont slag them off, they cant ignore whatever is currant’

A

Slaghuis and Curran, 1999- the reason people have disordered thinking and negative symptoms as a result, is that they have ATTENTIONAL processing problems which means they cant resist distraction.

165
Q

Delusions. ‘what the huq- of course not!’

A

Huq et al., delusions are a result of REASONING BIAS. did a jumping to conclusions paradigm and found that schizophrenics made decisions much more quickly then non sufferers.

166
Q

What did varese say?

A

Trauma in childhood triples the risk of psychosis

167
Q

‘ptsd from dropping the vodka in morrisons’

A

Morrison et al., 2013- 20-4-30% of psychosis sufferers met criteria for PTSD

168
Q

socio-cultural factors

A

says that low ses, means more adverse life events, means more chance of psychosis. attentional, behavioural and motivational problems that happen with psychosis cause a downward drift and maybe thats how you end up with los ses!

169
Q

INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY

Terminology issues

A

Historically it has been referred to as moron, feeble-minded etc.

People started using learning difficulty but UK government settled on learning disabilities because learning difficulties are used to define specific disorders, but learning disabilities are global issues.

170
Q

What are the 3 criteria used to define intellectual disability

A

1) Significant limitations in intellectual functioning
2) Significant limitations in adaptive functioning
3) Must be acquired before adulthood

171
Q

how do the UK department of health define intellectual disability

A

‘a significant impairment of intelligence and social functioning acquired before adulthood’

172
Q

how do the american psychiatric association 2013 define intellectual disability

A

they had a longer definition that includes ‘must have deficits in intellect, lack of adaptive functioning that results in failure to meet developmental and sociocultural criteria for independence. without support, deficits will limit communication, social functioning and social participation’

173
Q

what is the theory behind diagnosing intellectual disability

A

all based on statistical norms. must be two standard deviations below the norm. main population lies between 85-100. those with intellectual disability are less than 70.

174
Q

how has this changed through the times

A

in the DSM-4 in 1959, it was 1 SD below the norm, and stayed that way in the reassessment in 1973. but now it is 2 SD’S

175
Q

why might this be?

A

cost could play a factor. it meant a lot of people were no longer included as ‘disabled’

176
Q

what is the problem with basing it just on stats (intellectual disability)

A

‘failure in adaptive behaviour’ also needed to be part of it because it cant just be based on stats

177
Q

who decided that adaptive behaviour has always been part of the definition, and therefore stats alone is not sufficient

A

Tredgold 1998

178
Q

how did diagnosis change in 2002

A

they started basing it off a clinical basis, where they asked people if they could do things etc like cooking

179
Q

now what do we use

A

psychometric tests that incorporate intellectual and adaptive functioning are now used

180
Q

what are difficulties and disorders

A

specific problems. intellectual function is usually normal (above 70) in these. they are identified in school by educational psychologists and dyslexia and dyspraxia are examples

181
Q

so how are disabilities different

A

global and incurable, lifelong, problems include: problem solving, reasoning, vocab, comprehension, information, attention processing. Effects can me ameliorated through education!

182
Q

what are the tools for diagnosis. one for intellectual functioning and one for adaptive functioning.

A

the WAIS-IV (wechsler adult intelligence scale) and the Vineland Adaptive Behaviour Scales

183
Q

explain the Wechsler adult intelligence scale

A

A fully standardised IQ test which is used for intellectual functioning. IQ examined across 10 areas. We use the same standardised norms as the US as little difference was found when we tested it with a small group in the UK. You get a manual to learn, have to ask questions how it specifies. recording sheet, supplements which are the tests and a booklet with puzzles. half the test is non-verbal. 1) 9 blocks which are used for pattern making, have to mimic block. demonstrate first few items if they have an intellectual disability. they get time credits the more quickly they do the tasks. 2) verbal parts are similarities, say how 2 words are alike. ‘2 and 7’. 3) then a digit-span for working memory

184
Q

explain the Vineland Adaptive Behaviour Scales

A

there a lot of different ones but this is the best as it has an adult norm (over 21) a lot of the others are for children. covers conceptual skills (communication), practical skills and socialisation skills. asked the carer how capable they are at different tasks otherwise you get ‘passing’. assesses things like microwaves and atm’s, must make sure that the test is up to date and relevant and takes into account any motor problems that affect performance in the test

185
Q

why do we need to diagnose?

A

before the industrial revolution we didnt really need to as they seemed to get by in communities. but they started to fall behind when they couldnt work in factories. now we diagnose for 5 reasons:

1) understanding
2) mitigation
3) protection
4) benefits
5) services

186
Q

the debate about whether diagnosis is useful? ‘wwhy’

A

Webb and Whitaker- intellectual disability is a social construct anyway and not based on medical or psychological science. diagnosis is moving away from ‘what they cant do’ and focusing on what they can/

187
Q

what does the american association of developmental disabilities think about diagnosis

A

we should do it to focus on individual cases with different strategies for support, not just to put people in categoeis

188
Q

EPIDEMIOLOGY

how much of the official population should statistically be below the normal curve, and how much are officially reported?

A

predicted: 2.2%
actual: 0.5-1%

189
Q

a study that suggests a missing population

A

Simonoff et al., 2005- more people are suffering who arent recognised. a lot of people only get recognised when they have a child

190
Q

what is common with trying to find aetiology

A

can only really find causes in the really severe cases

191
Q

split up the 100% of cases that we know causes of

A

prenatal/genetic- 50%
perinatal- 20%
postnatal- 10%
unknown- 20%

192
Q

‘people who drink whilst preg are pretty wild’

A

Wildsmith, social deprivation has been linked, put down to exposure to toxins, maternal use of drugs/drink and exposure to abuse.

193
Q

Tenkku 2011

A

interventions could include conversations about strategies to stop drinking whilst pregnant, perhaps web-based

194
Q

what is the role of a clinical psychologist in services for those with intellectual disability. 6 things

A
  • diagnostic assessment
  • assess behavioural and mental health
  • assess support needs
  • service design (curved walls, dimmed lighting)
  • psychological intervention administering
  • looking at individuals, teams, families
195
Q

how does intellectual disability impact every day life

A
  • not understanding day to day functioning
  • finance support
  • dependent on others
  • complex relationships (negotiating sexual, family relationships)
  • trauma more likely and more likely to continue through life
  • mental health problems
  • annihilation
196
Q

what are clinical psychologists basically trying to do

A

move them up maslow’s hierarchy of needs. from food, water, warmth and rest to achieving ones potential and creative activities

197
Q

examples of interventions used

A

arousal management (CBT) for anxiety depression etc, experiential and exploratory work (psychodynamic). challenging behaviour support instead of behaviour modification which was ECT and shit

198
Q

5 important things to consider when working with someone with int dis

A

1) their level of understanding
2) how to communicate best
3) expectations of client and professionals
4) diversity, each one is different
5) values based and person centred

199
Q

EATING DISORDERS

what is the definition of an eating disorder
‘they get so fair and obsessively wash’

A

Fairburn and Walsh, 2002- a persistent disturbance in eating behaviour intended to control weight which significantly impairs physical health or psychosocial functioning

200
Q

what is an issue with the diagnosis of eating disorders

‘his bed sheets must be cos this is a massive knob comment’

A

historically they have been stereotyped as being a ‘white, female problem’. Crisp 1973- ED’s are a retreat from maturity, said its women not wanting to experience puberty

201
Q

what is the reality of eating disorders

A

they span all ages 6-80
10-15% of cases are male
most people with an ED are NOT THIN!
there is an equal number of non-whites. it is westernisation thats the problem not race.

202
Q

what did russel say about AN and BN

A

Russel 1979- Anorexia is the least common, 15% of cases, was discovered centuries ago but officially coined in 1970. BN there are 35% of cases, was discovered in 1970. harder to spot?

203
Q

‘it wouldnt be a fair burn to have a hairy son, this is really worrying!’

A

Fairburn and Harrison, 2003- Atypical disorders, which are all other disorders is the most common, 50% of cases! This is really worrying as we’ve missed a lot due to the white thin female stereotype

204
Q

what is another issue with the defintion including ‘impairment in psychosocial functioning’

A

this is a problem of context, an athelete or model needs to stay thing for their career. they wouldnt have an impairment in psychosocial functioning in this context

205
Q

explain anorexia nervosa, the 3 criteria

A

1) persistant restriction of energy intake- leads to significantly low body weight
2) intense fear of gaining weight or persistant behaviour that interfers with that, even though already significantly low weight
3) disturbance in way body shape or weight is experienced, come to value themselves only on their weight. consistent lack of recognition at how low their weight is

206
Q

explain bulimia nervosa. 6 criteria

A

1) its the same as anorexia but the main difference is BMI, if you purge and are thin- anorexia, if you purge and are normal weight- bulimia.
2) reccurent episodes of binge eating, (eating large amounts in small space of time) often eat at v similar times under similar circumstances.
3) feel a lack on control when you are binging
4) inappropriate behaviour to prevent gain, such as vomitting, laxatives, direutics, fasting, excessive exercise
5) binges and purges happen 1 a week for 3 months
6) self-evalutation only influenced by body weight/ appearence

207
Q

explain binge eating disorder 7 criteria

A

1) like bulimia but without the purging/compensatory behaviours
2) often likely to be overweight
3) characterised by episodes of
- eating faster then normal
- eating until uncomfortably full
- eating when not hungry
4) eat alone because embarrassed
5) feel disgusted and guilty after
6) also must happen once a week for more than 3 months

208
Q

name 5 other specified disorders

A

these dont meet the full criteria but still should not be discarded

1) atypical AN- anorexia but started at a really high weight so are normal weight
2) atypical BN- low frequency/duration of bingeing and purging
3) atypical binge-eating disorder- low frequency of bingeing/purging
4) purging disorder- eat normally but still purge
5) night-eating syndrome

209
Q

what is avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder ARFID-

A

Previously known as selective or fussy eating, common in children, basically an aversion to food because of certain criteria. often results in reliance on supplements, significant weight gain/loss and nutrition deficiency

210
Q

what are the 3 subtypes of ARFID

A

1) sensory-based ARFID- hate texture, smell, colour, brand
2) lack of interest
3) food associated with fear evoking stimulu, created through learned history (choked once for example)

211
Q

why is diagnosis so difficult and what has been suggested to overcome it

‘brick wall. set caregories. isnt FAIR’

A

the disorders overlap so much and there are so many different ones. 40-50% dont fit into these categories. Waller and Fairburn, 2003- the transdiagnostic model suggests that we should stop putting labels on people and simply say ‘you have an ED’ just focus on symptoms.

212
Q

comorbidity with other mental disorders. 4

A

relatively high levels of comorbidity with

  • anxiety (social and OCD)
  • depressed mood, (due to low serotonin)
  • personality disorders, although this is a controversial one as 1, you cant be diagnosed with a PD if you have a biological instability like an ED and 2, symptoms of a PD usually go away when you treat the ED.
  • alcohol or substance abuse, copious alcohol sometimes used as part of a binge
213
Q

comorbidity with physical problems. 6

A
  • cardiovascular problems from irregular heartbeats
  • muscle weakness
  • osteroperosis
  • liver damage
  • fainting
  • suicide
214
Q

who did a study into mortality in ED

A

Arcelus- 1 in 5 deaths in ed’s is down to suicide

215
Q

how many people in the UK have an eating disorder

A

750,000- 1% of the population

216
Q

why is it better to look at prevalence and not incidence

A

when someone goes to the gp they have been auffering for an average of 7 years, so its really hard to know onset

217
Q

‘hoe’ prevalence in young women

A

Hoek- looked into prevalence in young women.

AN- 0.3% cases
BN- 1.0 %
Other- 1-3%

This makes up 5-6% of the female population in the UK and 0.5% of males.

218
Q

julie walters and kendal jenner 2 of the most famous women

A

Walters and Kendler- 10x more likely to get it if a women

219
Q

‘rate this point SON!!!’

A

Harrison, 2001- this is because of the constant idealisation of women’s bodies in the western world

220
Q

is it growing

A

looks like it is but more likely that there are just more people reporting it

221
Q

two studies that look at the cutural effects of ED’s

‘can watch beckham on tele now’

‘not the keel all and end all’

A

Becker 2011- fiji study, half the women had eating disorders after 2 years of introducing tv

Keel and Klump, 2003- there have been cases without westernisation so its more likely that westernisation can explain influences on it but not causes it

222
Q

why is causation very hard to know

A

7 year til gp thing!

223
Q

the 3 biological theories

‘faker, you cant fake genes’

A

1) Hypothalamic disturbance
- the hypothalamus is responsible for appetite, animal lesion studies have shown that if you cut it, their appetite does decrease- but that is silly because sufferers do experience extreme hunger whilst restricting

2) Temporal lobe disturbance, body image distorion

3) Genetic loading- somewhat well accepted that their is a genetic component but also twin studies have shown that there is moderat genetic influence but that also environment is v important.
- Baker et al., 2010- causation is likely to be an interaction between genetics and environment.

224
Q

psychosocial factors that could play a part

A

Family dysfunction
Teasing by others
Trauma
Pressure to conform

225
Q

what is the cognitive-behavioural perspective on maintenance of eating disorders

A

1) over evaluation of body image, shape and weight. society tells us youre only acceptable if youre thin
2) the broken cognitive link between eating and weight, no matter what i eat i will still be fat

226
Q

what are the 4 elements to maintaining ed’s

A

Physiological- when you starve healthy people (keys minnesota study) they act the same as those with ed’s, are ED’S just a symptom of starvation?
Behavioural- the actual eating behaviour
Cognitions- thoughts that tell you youre only acceptable if thing
Emotions- anxiety, unstable mood and lack of emotions

227
Q

what are the 6 steps to maintaining the behaviours once they have arisen

A

1) positive reinforcement from others, causes a sense of control and reinforcement
2) this shifts to anxiety and terror that you might lose that, results in efforts to lose/maintain and behaviours like purging etc
3) if you acc lose control, you feel disguted and guilty. abstience violation- you feel its out of your control. even stronger efforts to stop
4) cognitive dissonance, the behaviour becomes your identity and negative self-perception justifies your behaviour
5) body image goes from bad to terrrible
6) starvation effects kick in

228
Q

what are two studies that show this

A

Keys, 1950 study that showed them becoming irratic, isolating and emotional unstable

Dutch hunger winter study

229
Q

what else can maintain eds

A

safety behaviours

230
Q

so what are the 3 ways

A

the cognitive behavioural perspective, the 6 steps of maintenance and safety behaviours

231
Q

how do safety behaviours work

A

they make you feel great in the short term and rewarded and then they become harmful. for example dieting stops anxiety at the time, but then the self-perpetuating cycle starts as these are the thoughts that feed into the anxiety in the first place

232
Q

what are some body related safety behaviours- 4

A

body avoidance (dont look in mirror, baggy clothes)
body measuring (constantly weighing)
body comparison to make self feel better
‘mind reading’ you think people think youre fat

233
Q

what are some safety behaviours that reduce fear and manage stress

A

vomitting, exercise, restriction, laxatices

234
Q

what are ones for emotional stress

A

bingeing (bc they feel numb)

235
Q

how does slade say a case is ‘formulated’

A

Slade 1982-

you have to look at multiple things to know where the need for control came from

  • Past experiences- usually involve perfectionism and low self esteem
  • Trigger happens to lose weight (compliments)
  • Start restricting
  • Safety behaviours make you feel great
  • Body pushes back, desire to binge
  • Feel out of control
  • Go back to restricting to feel in control
236
Q

PERSONALITY DISORDERS

what is the definition of personality

A

tendency towards a certain pattern of behaviour, emotion, cognition and interaction that show, regardless of situation we are in. personality is a trait rather than a state

237
Q

when does personality become a problem

A

when it doesnt fit into context, aggressive nun, anxious surgeon, boxer biting off ear

238
Q

what are the limitations to diagnosing different personality disorders

A

Its a very sociocultural issue because it could just be a way of telling people they don’t fit in. its very subjective gulag example

239
Q

what is the danger with diagnosing

A

could be a slippery slope towards diagnosing people before they have even done anything

240
Q

categories/dimensions theory of diagnosis

A

personality disorders come from being at the extreme end of either the stable/unstable spectrum of the introvert/extrovert.

241
Q

critical point

A

will always be tricky because some may be in a state not trait but still get diagnosed

242
Q

the old DSM-5 definition of personality

A

‘an enduring pattern of inner experience and behaviour that deviates markedly from the expectations of an individuals culture’

243
Q

what was the problem with this definition

A

just ‘not fitting in’ wasnt a good enough reason, needs to be about something actually important

244
Q

what is the new definition that came in 2013

A

impairments in personality (self and interpersonal) functioning and the presence of pathological personality traits.

245
Q

what are pathological personality traits?

A

maladaptive variants of the big 5 personality dimensions (Thomas et al., 2013)

246
Q

what 5 criteria do you have to meet to get a diagnosis

A

1) significant impairments in self (self-direction, identity) and interpersonal functioning (empathy, intimacy)
2) one or more pathological personality traits
3) must be stable over time and different situations
4) impairments not better described by developmental stage/socio-cultural development
5) not due to biological instability like trauma or drug abuse or starvation effect of eating disorders.

247
Q

what is the DSM 4 criteria for making a diagnosis

A

1) long term presentation, trace back to childhood
2) independent of biological factors
3) not to be diagnosed in childhood
4) not to be diagnosed after a single meeting

248
Q

what 3 categories can the disorders be put into

A

the weird, the wild, the wimpish

249
Q

what disorders are in the werid

A

all similar to schizo but no hallucination
paranoid pd
schizoid pd
schizotypal pd (magic)

250
Q

what disorders are in the wild

A
all emotional, drama based
ANTISOCIAL PD
histronic pd
narcissistic pd
borderline pd
251
Q

what disorders are in the wimpish

A

all anxiety based
avoidant pd
ocd
dependent pd

252
Q

critical point for epidimiology

A

many studies use weak measures which is a huge overestimation

253
Q

What did sansone and sansone say

A

10-15% of people have one. this makes them the most common psychopathology

254
Q

what are the most common kinds

A

antisocial, borderline, schizotypal and obsessive-compulsive

255
Q

‘gold digger and throt’ issues with the facts on incidence

A

Widiger and Trull, 1993= possible gender bias in histronic, borderline and dependent

256
Q

‘coil is shit’ fact

A

Coid et al., 2006- Personality disorders are more common in men but 75% of those with borderline were female

257
Q

what is the mean number of disorders someone might have

A

there is a high chance of having comorbidity in more than 1 disorder. mean disorders to have is 1.96

258
Q

what did zanarini say about personality disorders, really interesting fact

A

Zanarini., 1998- PD’s are diagnosed in one third of psychiatric patients but it is usually comorbid, other specific disorders that bring them in for treatment. this plays in massively to the spectrum idea

259
Q

what else are personality disorders often comorbid with

A
depression
substance misuse
panic disorder
eating disorders
social phobia
260
Q

what aetiological factors have been suggested for the WEIRD DISORDERS

‘cameron diaz in the holiday
‘remi, ratatouile- was he schizo’

A

Emotionless parenting
Cameron, 1974- lack of love makes them untrusting and paranoid
Fervaha and Remington 2013- people with schizotypal have similar brain abnormalities to schizophrenics

261
Q

what aetiological factors have been suggested for the WILD DISORDERS

‘farrington sounds like a scary head master’

A

Farrington et al., 1990- those with antisocial personality disorder often have a diagnosis of childhood conduct disorder, lying, fighting, truanting.
Parent modelling
Biological predisposition
Poor childhood care

262
Q

‘lobe walking down paths’ what does this suggest about causes if antisocial personality

A

Loeber et al., 1993-

1) an ‘overt’ aggressive pathway- bullying to fighting
2) a ‘covert’ aggressive pathway- lying to stealing
3) an ‘authority conflict’ pathway that progresses through different defiant behaviours

263
Q

what aetiological factors have been suggested for the WIMPISH DISORDERS

‘albert, dans albert, he is ocd’

‘aycicegi is how complex parent relationships are’

A

physiological predisposition to anxiety
Albert et al., 2014- OCD is not as similar to OCPD as you think, comorbidity is only 22%, suggests they have similar vulnerability factors but why is it not so comorbid
Aycicegi et al., 2002- underlying vulnerabilities is parenting that includes guilt induction and manipulation

very little research has been done into this cluster!

264
Q

what other things could play a part

A

cognitions- developing functional core beliefs due to bad parenting.

265
Q

what are the risk factors

A

low SES,
living in inner cities
being divorced or widowed
being a young adult

266
Q

what did johnson say

A

Johnson et al., 1999- childhood and sexual abuse massively linked

267
Q

critical point

A

are these risk factors symptoms of a personality or the causes (low ses, divorce, trauma)