Schizophrenia: explanations of Sz Flashcards
(42 cards)
Briefly outline family dysfunction
C/hood trauma in form of dysfunctional family
Probs with developing mind, foundations are at fault
Paranoia can develop
Disorganised thoughts can develop
Manifests in adulthood as signs of schiz
3 areas:
Schizophrenogenic mother / family – Fromm-Reichman 1948
Double bind communications- Bateson - 1956
High expressed emotion – Brown 1966
These explanations emphasize family-orientated theories of the disorder that emphasise the importance of upbringing and in particular trauma play a role in the development of schizophrenia.
Essentially these explanations stress the importance of how maladaptive family relationships and poor communication within the household contribute to the development of schizophrenia.
If a child is to experience TRAUMA in childhood (such as poor communication styles), this could be repressed or denied using DEFENSE MECHANISMS. In turn, this will create an unconscious ISSUE, which could reappear (MANIFEST) in adulthood in the form of schizophrenia symptoms.
The approach claims poor family relationships and deviant communication can drastically affect the way a growing child perceives reality and interacts with the world.
If these problems persist into adulthood, schizophrenia could result.
Outline the Schizophrenogenic mother as an explanation of schiz
Fromm-Reichmann (1948) - a mother who is domineering, insensitive, controlling, overprotective as well as rejecting.
This type of mother may micromanage her kids and refuse to acknowledge their independence which sets up lines of faulty communication between her and the child -contributing to symptoms of schiz in a/hood.
This can create excessive stress that could trigger psychotic thinking e.g. paranoia and develop into SCHIZ in adulthood.
In the 1970’s this theory was broadened to include how the father and entire family could have schizophrenogenic tendencies.
Outline Double bind hypothesis as an explanation of schiz
BATESON et al (1956) focused on contradictory communication coined ‘double-bind’
Families that communicate in this way make kids more susceptible to SCHIZ in adulthood. E.g. the mother tells her son she loves him, yet at the same time turns her head away in disgust. Hence, the child receives conflicting messages and becomes confused and suspicious and cannot develop an internally coherent construction of reality.
This may contribute to the development of schizophrenia in early adulthood, through paranoia and disorganised thinking
Outline High expressed Emotion as explanation of schiz
This revolves around how family interactions affect the development of schizophrenia rather than its onset. High EE families express considerable emotion – higher levels of concern for, and / or hostility towards the patient. Kuipers et al (1983) found that high EE relatives talk
more and listen less. Linszen et al (1997) found that patients returning to a high EE household is
four times more likely to relapse than those whose family has low EE. This finding has been replicated several times.
Outline Family schism as an explanation of schiz
this relates to severe and chronic disequilibrium (imbalance) in the household and persistent family discord (constant tension and arguing within the family).
These experiences may well be pushed to the back of a child’s mind - but may resurface in a/hood as symptoms of Schiz
Outline Family skew as an explanation of schiz
this is when one parent is dysfunctional and the other maintains a peacemaking stance. Sometimes this comes across as one domineering parent and one submissive parent, that refuses to criticise or recognise negative qualities in the other parent.
The child internalises this type of relationship as the norm, and may develop disorganised thoughts / speech as an adult - contributing to schiz
Evaluation for family dysfunction: Lidz
LIDZ 1965
Lidz et al (1965) looked at the cases of 50 schizophrenic patients and investigated their family backgrounds. Forty-five (90%) were found to have seriously disturbed
families. 60% of the patients had one or both parents with a serious personality disorder. Parental marriages were often skewed (characterised by one dominant and one submissive parent)
This implies Dysfunctional family backgrounds may well contribute to the develpment of Schiz
Evaluation for family dysfunction: cause and effect
There is a cause and effect argument with dysfunctional families.
Perhaps if you have a child that is particularly susceptible to mental health concerns - a normal parental response would show excessive concern, involvement and guidelines for their child. This may suggest that high expressed emotion may well be a response to kids with emotional distress, as opposed to a contributing factor to the condition
This suggests unusual family behavioural patterns may be a response to schizophrenia not a cause.
Evaluation for family dysfunction: alternative explanations
Alternative explanations of schizophrenia are more scientific and hence, more credible.
This approach explains the origins of schizophrenia as a consequence of a dysfunctional family, which is based on factors that are difficult to study objectively (e.g. childhood and the unconscious mind). These concepts are subjective and require a degree of interpretation which restricts the validity of the account.
A better more scientific alternatives include:
the dopamine hypothesis
Because
that can objectively identify abnormal levels of the neurotransmitter through sophisticated PET scans or cerebrospinal fluids
This could suggest…the family dysfunctional explanation of schiz is redundant as more trustworthy explanation are available
Evaluation for family dysfunction: high EE and relapse evidence
This is more compelling evidence to show how returning to a household with high EE effects relapse.
Butzlaff and Hooley (1998) completed a meta-analysis of 26 studies and found that when patients suffering from schizophrenia returned to families with high EE they experienced more than twice the rate of relapse of schizophrenia symptoms.
This provides further concurrent validity to Linszens et al (1997) findings that high EE clearly relates to schiz
Therefore, this shows how high levels of EE clearly impacts on the relapse of schizophrenia
Evaluation for family dysfunction: practical explanations
This explanation has been practically applied to help those suffering from schizophrenia.
Family therapy is a very effective treatment to come out of this explanation that aims to help the patient and the family come to terms with the schizophrenia diagnosis, how to readily spot early signs of relapse and how to cope without resorting to high levels of EE
This implies … the dysfunctional family explanation of schiz has been beneficial to the 1% of the population that struggle with this psychotic condition, and may help to restore family dynamics
Evaluation for family dysfunction: socially senstive
This explanation can be criticised for causing further problems for the sufferer and their families.
The explanation tends to blame the way parents have raised and interacted with their children as the sole cause of schiz. This is hardly protecting patients and their families from harm, and in some instances can be seen to make family dynamics even worse
This suggests …that in such a socially sensitive topic clinicians need to be mindful of how causal factors are discussed with patients and their families
What is the Central monitoring system (CMS)
Typically, this ‘process’ labels & recognises actions and thoughts as ‘being done by me’ or ‘mine’
With schiz, a malfunction within the CMS could explain positive symptoms
Hallucinations and delusions.
E.g. faults with misattributions our inner speech to external sources such as others voices
What is the Supervisory attentional system (SAS)
Typically this ‘process’ responsible for generating self-initiated actions
With Schiz, a malfunction can be seen to create negative symptoms
speech poverty, flat affect and avolition
E.g. Not responding to environmental stimuli with appropriate (or even any) emotions because of a faulty SAS (flat affect and speech poverty) Limiting interaction
What is Egocentric bias
Typically we can all see we are not central component to all events
Usually we grow out of this
With schiz, Egocentric bias – everything relates to them specifically, so jumps to false conclusions
E.g. muffled voices = peoples criticisms
E.g. flashes of light = signals from God
Delusions of…..
bentall
Evidence evaluation for cognitive dysfunction linked to schiz
There is evidence that supports the role of cognitive dysfunction being linked to Schiz:
BENTALL 1991
Asked participants to either generate category items themselves (e.g. animals beginning with the letter B) or read out category items.
One week later, participants were asked whether they had generated the words i) themselves,ii) read them, or iii) whether they were new.
Results showed schiz participants with hallucinations performed worse (i.e. were unable to identify the source of the words); than schiz patients without hallucinations and both groups performed worse that non- schiz controls
Hence, this research undelines the role of cognition in schiz.
Evaluate cognitive explanations of schiz: cause and effect issue
Like other explanations the cognitive account of schizophrenia suffers from a cause and effect issue.
Although cognitive deficits are rife with schizophrenia - these may well be the effect of schiz as opposed to a causal factor.
In fact both cognitive deficits and schiz could be caused by another factor completely e.g. high dopamine or urban living
This implies …dysfunctional thought processes may simply be a manifestation of schiz as opposed to an instigating factor
Evaluation cogntive explanation of schiz: practical explanations
This explanation has been practically applied to help those suffering from schizophrenia
CBT aims to challenge and change the cognitive deficits of patients with schiz. and alter their behaviour simultaneously through developing more rational constructive ways of thinking and functioning.
This has been shown to be very effective with many patients with schiz
This implies …the cognitive dysfunctional explanation of schiz has been very useful to the 1% of the population that are suffering from schizophrenia
Outline genetic inheritance as an explanation of schiz
Researchers have suggested that some people may have a genetic predisposition to schizophrenia, and hence the condition is at least partly inherited. This means the disorder runs in families through faulty genes.
Researchers believe that no one gene is likely to be responsible for all cases of schizophrenia, but several genes are involved (i.e. it’s polygenic). Ripke et al (2014) reported 108 genetic variants that could mediate a vulnerability to the disorder, including variations on chromosome 8 and 11, and the C4 gene. Similarly, Hong et al (2001) found that a variation on the gene TPH was far more common with Chinese patients with schizophrenia (interestingly this codes for serotonin production).
Having some of these genes ultimately increases a person’s vulnerability to developing schizophrenia, by inheriting biochemical imbalances or brain structure abnormalities.
Outline The Function of the C4 Gene
Complement component 4 (C4) gene is found at synapses in the central nervous system and mediates the pruning of synapses that normally takes place during development.
A variant C4 is a clear risk factor for schizophrenia.
Research supports the hypothesis that excessive or hyper-pruning could lead to symptoms of schizophrenia.
The findings may help explain the longstanding mystery of why brains from people with schizophrenia tend to have a thinner cerebral cortex with fewer synapses than unaffected individuals do.
Explain Gottesman & Shields (1991)
Children of two schizophrenic patients who share 100% genetic similarity, have a 46% chance of developing the disorder.
Similarly MZ (identical twins) who share 100% genetic similarity have a 48% chance of developing the disorder if one twin has been diagnosed.
First degree relatives, like children of a sufferer, share 50% genetic similarity have a 13% chance of developing the disorder if a parent has been diagnosed.
Likewise, second degree relatives, like grandchildren, share 25% genetic similarity and have a 5% chance of developing schizophrenia, if a grandparent had been diagnosed.
Adoption Studies - Back ground
Adoption studies have some advantages over twin studies and family studies, such as…
If a child whose parent(s) have schizophrenia also develops schizophrenia when they’re older, we cannot say for certain whether there is a biological / genetic cause for the disorder, or an environmental one. For instance, we already know children often imitate their parents, so maybe schizophrenic behaviour is learnt from their parents.
With adoption studies, the child is not raised by their biological parent(s) with schizophrenia, so we can be more certain that it was not growing up in an environment with schizophrenic role models that influenced the development of the condition within the child.
Adoption Studies: Tienari et al. (2000)
Tienari et al. (2000) completed an adoption study in Finland with over 164 adopted kids whose biological mothers had been diagnosed with schizophrenia. These were matched with kids whose biological mothers did not suffer from schizophrenia.
The study found 11 (7%) of the sample whose biological mothers had schizophrenia had also been diagnosed with the condition compared to just 4 (2%) from the control group.
This helps validate the idea that schizophrenia has a genetic component as the adopted children do not share environmental influences with their biological mothers and provides concurrent validity for the role of genes in schiz
Evaluation biological explanation of schiz: evidence from Joseph
There is even further evidence to support the theoretical foundations of the biological explanation of schizophrenia.
Joseph et al. (2004) found a 40% concordance rate in schizophrenia for MZ twins (who share 100% genetic similarity) and a 7% concordance rate for DZ twins (who share 50% genetic similarity).
The higher concordance rate of schizophrenia for MZ twins (when the environmental influences on both groups can assumed to be no more similar than for DZs).
This implies… genes have some influence on the development of schizophrenia.