Test #2 Flashcards

1
Q

Ch. 9: What is another term for factitious disorder?

A

Munchausen syndrome

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2
Q

Ch 9: What is a factitious disorder? How does it manifest? How does it relate to malingering?

A

Definition: a disorder in which a person feigns or induces physical symptoms, typically for the purpose of assuming the role of a sick person (i.e., they enjoy the role of a sick person)

Malingering - intentionally feigning illness to achieve some external gain, such as time off from work/school

Attributes:
- great medical knowledge
- go to great lengths to be tested, pay lots of money
- generally begins in adulthood

Causes:
- being a nurse or medical aid
- depression
- being tested heavily as a child
- unsupportive parental relationships during childhood
- extreme needs for attention/concern/care

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3
Q

Ch. 9: What is “factitious disorder imposed on another” or “Munchausen syndrome by proxy?”

A
  • when parents or caregivers make up or produce physical illnesses in their children
  • symptoms tend to disappear when children are removed from their parents
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4
Q

Ch. 9: What is conversion disorder?

A

Definition: when people display physical symptoms that affect voluntary motor or sensory functioning, but the symptoms are inconsistent with known medical diseases (e.g., neurological problems but spinal cord is okay)

  • typically begins in late childhood/young adulthood
  • underlying emotional trauma appearing as physical symptoms (Freud’s psychoanalytic theory)
  • mind pushes physical problems forward for attention (modern CBT)
  • focus on reward and reinforcement, maintains symptoms
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5
Q

Ch. 9: What is Illness Anxiety Disorder or hypochondria? How does it differ from somatic disorder?

A

Definition: When one is abnormally concerned with their own health and obsessed with having a severe but undiagnosed medical condition.
- onset at any age (typically in early adulthood, no distinction between men and women)
- frequently switching doctors/counselors
- also referred to as “health anxiety”
- Illness Anxiety Disorder (modern term)

Somatic Disorder: when a person obsesses over a physical symptom (e.g., pain, shortness of breath) to the point where it results in major distress and incapacitation.

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6
Q

Ch. 9: What are psychophysiological disorders?

A

Definition: a group of physical illnesses that seem to be caused or worsened by an interaction of biological, psychological, and sociocultural factors (also known as psychological factors affecting other medical conditions)

Examples:
- ulcers
- asthma
- insomnia
- muscle contraction headache
- migraines
- hypertension (chronic high blood pressure)
- coronary heart disease (blocking of the coronary arteries)

Treatment:
- relaxation therapy
- paying attention to bodily needs

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7
Q

Ch. 10: What is anorexia nervosa?

A

Definition:

  • 2 Types: Bingeing/Purging vs. Restricting
  • 70-ish% females
  • .6%

Treatment:
- rebalancing nutrition treatment (nutritional rehabilitation)
- CBT; addresses underlying psychological therapy
- family therapy

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8
Q

Ch. 10: What is bulimia anorexia?

A

Definition: bingeing, compensatory behaviors (e.g., throwing up, laxatives)
- comes from guilt/shame rather than losing weight
- bulimics tend to maintain their regular weight

  • 70% women
  • 0.1% people

Treatment:
- stopping binge/purge pattern
- addressing underlying psychological issues
- education, psychotherapy (including CBT), antidepressants

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9
Q

Ch. 10: What is binge-eating?

A

Definition:

  • 2.8% people
  • 64% of women
  • results in being overweight
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10
Q

Ch. 11: What are depressants? What disorders are they related to?

A
  • slows activity of the central nervous system (CNS)
  • increases GABA in the brain or relaxation (ex: alcohol, benzos, barbiturates)
  • ben and barb lol
  • opioid use disorder (meaning an addiction to opioids such as morphine), alcohol use disorder (an addiction to alcohol), sedative hypnotic disorder (an addiction to barbs and benzos)
  • .9% alcohol in bloodstream for intoxication
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11
Q

Ch. 11: What are stimulants?

A

Definition:
- increases dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin
- increases activity of the central nervous system (CNS)
- caffeine, amphetamines (meth) nicotine, cocaine

  • stimulant use disorder (addiction to cocaine or amphetamines)
  • 22% of Americans smoke (59 million people)
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12
Q

Ch. 11: What are hallucinogens?

A

Definition:
- disturbs the release of serotonin
- psychedelic drug
- MDMA (ecstasy, molly), LSD, ketamine, cannabis

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13
Q

Ch. 11: Why drugs? Substance use disorders from different perspectives.

A

Cognitive-Behavioral Perspective:
- reduces anxiety/tension (coping)

Biological:
- genetic predisposition

Socio-Cultural:
- different stressors in the environment that make it difficult to cope with

Psychodynamic:
- making up for something you needed in early childhood
- certain personality types that are prone to abuse substances

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14
Q

Ch. 11: Treatments for substance abuse disorders?

A
  • Aversion Therapy (pairing unpleasant stimuli with doing drugs)
  • Relapse-Prevention Training (planning ahead and applying coping strategies in situations that can be triggering)
  • Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (accepting thoughts and just thoughts)
  • Detoxification (supervised withdrawal)
  • Antagonist drugs (block or change the effects of the addictive drug)
  • Agonist drugs
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15
Q

Ch. 9: How do the different models explain conversion and somatic symptom disorders?

A

Psychodynamic:
- converting internal conflicts into “more tolerable” symptoms
- primary gains = ignoring/avoiding internal conflicts
- secondary gain = when symptoms gain concern/kindness from others or an excuse to avoid unpleasantries (e.g., getting out of a break-up)

Cognitive-Behavioral:
- somatic vigilance (some people pay attention to their bodies more than others)
- learned rewards
- forms of self-expression (help people express emotions they might’ve struggled expressing otherwise; communicating in a “physical language”)

Multicultural:
- somatic reactions to distress = an inferior way of dealing with problems (not the case for non-Western cultures)

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16
Q

Ch. 9: How are conversion and somatic disorders treated according to different models (including focuses on physical symptoms)?

A

Psychotherapy as a last result (seek medical professionals first, given the nature of the disorder)

Psychodynamic:
- resolving internalized fears that convert anxiety into physical symptoms

Cognitive-Behavioral:
- exposure to features of events that triggered their symptoms

Biological:
- antidepressants to help reduce depression/anxiety

Focus on physical symptoms:
- education (explanation)
- reinforcement (removal of rewards for exhibiting symptoms, approval given for exhibiting healthy behavior)
- cognitive restructuring (think differently about physical impairments)