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Title: Professor of Psychiatry Faculty of Medicine


1
Vulnerability to Stress and Psychopathology
by
Adriano Vaz Serra
Professor of Psychiatry Faculty of
Medicine Head of the Psychiatric Department
University Hospital
University of Coimbra - Portugal
2
What can we say about stress?
3
Stress
  • In everyday life it is impossible for the human
    being to avoid stress inducing situations.
  • Stress is not always harmful. What is harmful for
    the human being is
  • A rather monotonous life, without stimuli that
    fulfill it or
  • Having a life with a high number of disturbing
    and repetitive demands which cannot be adequately
    dealt with.

4
Stress
  • In intermediate situations stress is useful
    because it is a source of impulse which lead the
    individual to make decisions and solve problems,
    helping him improve his performance, skills and
    creativity.
  • In this sense, stress brings some flavour to life
    and may become an incentive of professional and
    personal fulfillment.

5
Stress
  • Excessive stress becomes harmful because it may
  • evoke strong negative emotions
  • lead to the development or worsening of a
    physical and/or psychic illness
  • have a negative influence on family, working and
    social life
  • cause a higher number of labour and road
    accidents,
  • harm the decision-making processes and
  • have repercussions on aspects of an economical
    nature.

6
Stress
  • The stress inducing events may be of 3 types
  • Fatalities coming from outside e. g., the sudden
    death of a relative.
  • Causes coming from within, determined by the
    behaviour and attitudes of the individual which
    generate serious situations.
  • Sometimes, a mixed causality, in which an
    individual, due to the way he(she) is, is unable
    to avoid disturbing situations facing him(her).

7
Stress
Types of stress
Harmful
Beneficial
Centered on the event
Promotes personal development
Centered on the individual
Mixed
Is limited to a given situation which is
successfully overcome
Long term disturbance to the individuals
stability
8
Coping strategies
  • A person in stress can develop any one of 3 kinds
    of strategies
  • problem-centered,
  • emotion-centered, and
  • centered on obtaining social support.
  • There are individuals who are predisposed to use
    a given type of strategy instead of others. Any
    one of them can be used concomitantly.
  • These strategies can be adequate or inadequate.

9
Vulnerability to stress
  • And now we must ask
  • What does vulnerability mean?
  • Are some persons more vulnerable to stress than
    others?

10
Are some individuals more vulnerable to stress
than others?
11
What does vulnerability mean?
  • For Beck and Emery (1985) a vulnerable person is
    one who
  • has the perception of being subjected to dangers
    of external or internal nature
  • over which he has no control or, at least,
  • has no control which he considers sufficient to
    give him a sense of security.

12
Vulnerability to stress
  • Leighton (1998) mentions that, in the 1950s,
    there was a belief in the aetiological
    destabilising power of environmental factors.
  • This is currently being questioned, because it is
    recognised that there are individuals who suffer
    the impact of adverse circumstances without
    suffering great damage from them.

13
Vulnerability to stress
  • The effects of stress on the individual are
    greatly mediated by a certain number of
    variables, of biological, psychological and
    social nature, some of which lessen its effects
    and others, on the contrary, emphasize them
    (Leighton, 1998).

14
Vulnerability to stress
  • Brown (1993) mentions that it became necessary in
    the mid-70s to distinguish between life events
    and the vulnerability factors that change an
    individuals response to occurrences.
  • Vulnerability represents the increased risk of
    reacting in a negative way before a given life
    event.

15
Vulnerability to stress
  • This formulation implies the presence of an
    interaction between the life event and the
    vulnerability factor.
  • According to Brown (1993) the concept of
    vulnerability must be understood within the
    specific relation which is established between
    the individual and the circumstance.

16
Vulnerability to stress
  • In clinical practice, it is often proved that the
    vulnerability to stress varies a great deal from
    individual to individual.
  • There are persons who decompensate before the
    slightest annoyance, whilst others appear to
    resist a large number of unpleasant situations,
    even those who threaten the individuals life and
    security.

17
Vulnerability to stress
  • Kessler and Magee (1994), mention that the
    relation established between the stress-inducing
    events and the consequent psychological
    disturbances explains less than 10 of the
    variance.
  • Coyne and Whiffen (1995), note that most people
    do not become depressed, even when faced with
    clearly serious stress-inducing circumstances.

18
Vulnerability to stress
  • Due to these facts, there is a growing interest
    in the identification of the factors that protect
    people or make them vulnerable to stress.
  • Allow us to mention a study we made on
    vulnerability to stress.

19
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20
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • In order to construct a scale, following a
    revision of the literature, Vaz Serra (2000)
    selected 64 questions related to vulnerability to
    stress, about
  • negative personality characteristics,
  • positive personality characteristics,
  • practice of regular physical exercise,
  • access to a confident,
  • social and family support, and
  • adverse life conditions .

21
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • Each question may be answered in any of 5 ways.
    The value attributed to it varies between 0 and
    4, the highest score corresponding to the most
    negative aspects of the individuals description.
  • In order to avoid answering tendencies, some
    questions were constructed to represent positive
    aspects, and others to represent negative aspects.

22
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • We asked each respondent to fill in, in addition
    to the scale, some psychometric instruments which
    are directly or indirectly related to
    psychopathology
  • Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI, L. DeRogatis, 1982)
  • Eysenck Personality Inventory (EPI, H.J. Eysenck
    e Sybil B.G. Eysenck, 1964).
  • Problem Resolution Inventory (PRI, Vaz Serra,
    1987) which evaluates coping strategies.

23
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • When correlating the items of the scale of
    vulnerability to stress with the above-mentioned
    psychometric inventories we assumed that we would
    learn the profile of the individual who is more
    prone to developing psychopathological
    manifestations in stress conditions.

24
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • The work was conceived as follows

Cause
Individual
Effect
Psychopathology
?
Stressful event
Tolerance (no psychopathology)
?
25
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • Each respondent was evaluated in 7 possible
    classes of stress inducing situations
  • Traumatic events
  • Major life events
  • Chronic stress events
  • Hassles
  • Macro stressors
  • Nonevents
  • Early life traumatic events

26
A study on vulnerability to stress
The sample general population
Female
Male
Total
p
368
184
184
Age
Mean
42.43
42.70
42.15
N.S.
80
40
40
20s
30s
80
40
40
40s
80
40
40
50s
80
40
40
60s
48
24
24
27
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • Each respondent recorded whether himself, a
    parent or any other relative suffered or had once
    suffered from some nervous infirmity, a
    designation which usually is associated to
    emotional disturbances.
  • The self-record of nervous infirmities helped
    us construct, at the end, a cut-off point,
    between vulnerable and non-vulnerable
    individuals, corresponding to the value of 43.

28
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • The sample was constituted by individuals of the
    general population distributed by all educational
    levels.
  • As regards their civil status, most were married.
  • The scale was finalised with 23 questions.
  • Due to this fact, it was called 23 QVS (23
    Questions to measure Vulnerability to Stress).

29
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • As for the selection of items 41 of the 64
    initial questions were excluded for the following
    reasons
  • 20 questions showed statistically significant
    differences between genders.
  • 8 items failed to correlate with BSI, EPI or PRI.
  • 7 questions showed a ceiling effect (most of the
    individuals described themselves as too
    perfect) .
  • Cronbachs ?-value led to the exclusion of 6
    items which affected internal consistency .

30
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • Odd/Even correlation .732 and
  • Spearman-Brown Coeff. .845
  • Cronbachs ? .824 for all items. This value
    decreased if any one of the selected items was
    excluded, which underlines their importance as a
    contributive element to a good homogeneity.

Good internal consistency

31
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • The correlation of each question with the global
    note was positive and highly significant, both
    when the analysed item was included in the global
    note and when it was not.
  • This fact confirms that it corresponds to an
    unidimensional scale, which defines a concept.

32
A study on vulnerability to stress
The highest correlations with the global note
suggest that, the more an individual is
vulnerable to stress, the more he tends to show
the following profile
  • Lack of self-assertion
  • Low tolerance to frustration
  • Difficulty in facing and solving problems
  • Excessive concern with events of everyday life
  • High emotionability.

33
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • Each item of the scale showed to be sensitive to
    variations of extreme groups, which underlines
    its discriminative power.
  • The item correlation matrix showed that no
    correlation presented a particularly high value,
    which means that there are no redundant items.
  • The test/retest correlation was undertaken within
    a minimum of 30 and a maximum of 239 days, with a
    median of 49 days. Value of r .816 (N 105).

34
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • Underlying dimensions
  • We did a principal components factor analysis,
    followed by an orthogonal varimax-type rotation.
  • We obtained through this 7 factors which explain
    57.5 of the total variance.

35
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • The highest-loading items in the various factors
    led us to admit that they express the
    significance which follows
  • F1 Perfectionism and intolerance to
    frustration.
  • F2 Inhibition and functional dependence.
  • F3 Lack of social support.
  • F4 Adverse life conditions.
  • F5 Dramatisation of existence.
  • F6 Subjugation, and
  • F7 Deprivation of affection and rejection.

36
A study on vulnerability to stress
37
A study on vulnerability to stress
Correlations between 23 QVS and E.P.I., P.R.I.,
B.S.I.
E.P.I.
B.S.I.
P.R.I.
Neurot.
Extrav.
SGI
TPS
PSI
23 QVS
.674
-.182
.640
.570
.487
-.639
N 368
p lt .001 for all
38
A study on vulnerability to stress
Summing up
  • The higher the value of 23 QVS, the higher the
    likelihood that it corresponds to an individual
    who is
  • emotional
  • with poor coping strategies
  • prone to developing psychopathology

39
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • Using the value of 43 as the cut-off point, we
    analysed the 7 stress-inducing classes in the 368
    subjects of the sample, separated in two groups
    according to the said value.
  • The group of individuals with a 23 QVS value 43
    showed a higher number of stressors in all
    classes of events.

40
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • Hassles, chronic stress events and macro
    stressors were particularly evident.
  • Serious traumas and early life traumatic events
    were the least frequent. Nevertheless, they
    showed a higher prevalency in the group with a 23
    QVS value 43.

41
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • Vaz Serra et al. (1991) had already found that
    individuals with poorer coping strategies tend to
    feel a higher number of problems in various areas
    of their lives, as compared with those who show
    better strategies.

42
A study on vulnerability to stress
  • Vaz Serra et al. (1991) suggest that the
    individuals with poor coping strategies tend to
    see a problem in everything or making a
    problem out of everything.
  • The prominence of hassles, chronic stress and
    macro stressors in individuals with higher 23 QVS
    values suggests that they use inadequate
    strategies in dealing with their everyday
    problems.

43
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44
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45
Air traffic controllers
  • In a study of 155 air traffic controllers, Isabel
    Mota (2002) used the PRI, the 23 QVS and an
    analogical scale of stress perceived under work
    conditions.
  • The average value of 23 QVS for the group
    equalled 30, which makes us admit that their
    elements were not particularly vulnerable to
    stress.

46
Air traffic controllers
  • Having undertaken a logistical regression for the
    study of stress perceived under work conditions,
    she found a significant effect connected to
    gender and factors 1, 3, 4 and 7 of the 23 QVS.
  • According to Isabel Mota the odds ratio showed
    that a womans probability of having a higher
    stress perception than a man under the same work
    conditions is 4.3 times higher.

47
Air traffic controllers
  • The personal characteristics indicating
  • Perfectionism and intolerance to frustration
    (F1).
  • Lack of social support (F3).
  • Existence of adverse life conditions (F4) and
  • Deprivation of affection and rejection (F7)
  • are associated to higher levels of perceived
    stress .
  • A unit by unit increase of the scores of each of
    the above factors increases between 2 and 3 times
    the risk of belonging to a group of higher
    perceived stress.

48
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49
Stress in hotel industry
  • José P. Cruz and Helena Costa (2002) made a study
    about stress in the hotel industry in 135
    individuals working for a major chain of hotels
    in the Algarve region.
  • By using the 23 QVS, they found a positive and
    highly significant correlation (r .520 p lt
    .001) between that scale and the stress mentioned
    by the respondents.

50
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51
War stress in Marine troops
  • Monteiro Ferreira (2002) studied 196 former
    Special Marines of the Portuguese Navy who were
    engaged in combat in Angola, Mozambique and
    Guinea-Bissau.
  • They were designated for particularly complex and
    dangerous missions.
  • The number of years as Marines spanned between 2
    and 11, with a median of 6 years.

52
War stress in Marine troops
  • The 196 subjects of the sample were individually
    submitted to an interview which consisted of a
    simplified form of CAPS - Clinician Administered
    PTSD Scale (Blake et al., 1995) and also replied
    to 23 QVS.

53
War stress in Marine troops
  • Two groups of veterans were identified .
  • With suspicion of PTSD (N116 59,2 of the
    sample).
  • Without suspicion of PTSD (N80 40,8 of the
    sample).

54
War stress in Marine troops
  • The two groups showed no statistically
    significant differences as regards age and
    educational level.
  • Nearly all elements of both groups were married.
  • The next slide shows the results which were
    obtained.

55
War stress in Marine troops
PTSD N116
No PTSD N80
p
Means
23 QVS
53.41
37.81
.000
F1
3.52
2.88
.000
F2
1.51
0.76
.000
F3
0,93
0.80
N.S.
F4
1.54
1.22
.05
F5
2.27
1.91
.05
F6
1.96
1.11
.000
F7
1.21
0,32
.000
56
War stress in Marine troops
  • Following a study of sensitivity and specificity,
    it was noted that the 23 QVS scale correctly
    identified
  • 85 of those affected by PTSD and
  • 83 of those not affected by PTSD.
  • It thus proved to be a scale with good
    sensitivity and specificity.

57
Quality of life in patients with Multiple
Sclerosis
58
Quality of life in patients with MS
  • Multiple Sclerosis is a CNS disease which begins
    in ones late teens or early adult life. It shows
    recurrent episodes of dysfunction of the upper
    spinal cord, brain stem, cerebellum, optical
    nerves and the brain, resulting from foci of
    destruction of mielinised fibres (Adams, Victor
    and Ropper, 1998).
  • Mohr and Cox (2001) mention that there is a
    relation between the way in which people deal
    with life events and the episodes of remission
    and aggravation of the disease.

59
Quality of life in patients with MS
  • Sofia Cruz et al. (2004) made a study about the
    influence of resilience and vulnerability to
    stress on the quality of life of Multiple
    Sclerosis patients.
  • Being a disease with a low prevalency the authors
    could built up a sample of 34 patients 15
    female and 19 male.

60
Quality of life in patients with MS
  • Quality of life was evaluated with FAMS
    (Functional Assessment of Multiple Sclerosis -
    Cella et al., 1996).
  • Resilience to stress was measured with Aaron
    Antonowskys The Sense of Coherence
    Questionnaire, (SCQ).
  • The 23 QVS was used to evaluate the vulnerability
    to stress.

61
Quality of life in patients with MS
  • Aida Mendes et al. (2004) found these results
  • A correlation of -.63 (plt.00) between 23 QVS and
    FAMS.
  • Utilising 43 as a cut-off point for the 23 QVS
    they found that the individuals above that value
    mentioned a worse quality of life (p.004).
  • A positive correlation (plt.000) between SCQ and
    FAMS.
  • A negative correlation of -.683 (plt.000) between
    23 QVS and SCQ.

62
Quality of life in patients with MS
  • They came to the following conclusions
  • The quality of life of Multiple Sclerosis
    patients is inversely related to their
    vulnerability to stress.
  • There is a negative and highly significant
    correlation between resilience and vulnerability
    to stress.

63
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64
Mental schemas
  • Mental schemas are a generalised representation
    of the experiences that regularly appeared to a
    given individual. Once developed, they can
    persist throughout ones entire life.
  • They become organisers of principles for the
    individuals emotional and behavioural
    performance.
  • They can induce an adequate and adaptative
    behaviour, or an inadequate and maladaptative
    behaviour.

65
Mental schemas
  • The mental schemas organise the experience in the
    various contexts an individual goes through, and
    enable him to give it a significance.
  • They define what is expected to be seen, heard or
    remembered.
  • When an individual enters a given situation, he
    will decode it according to his previous
    experiences, which will indicate him what he can
    expect from it and how he should act.

66
In brief
Mental Schemas
Information processing

-
Attitudes and behaviour
Attitudes and behaviour
Adaptatives
Maladaptatives
Vulnerability to stress
No vulnerability to stress
67
Early Maladaptive Schemas
  • Jeffrey Young (1990) mentions that early
    maladaptive schemas are extremely stable and
    enduring themes that develop during childhood and
    are elaborated upon throughout an individuals
    lifetime.
  • Schemas are unconditional beliefs about oneself
    in relation to the environment.

68
Early Maladaptive Schemas
  • They are self-perpetuating and resistant to
    change they are the core of the individuals
    self-concept.
  • They are disfunctional in some significant and
    recurring manner.
  • They are usually activated by events in the
    environment, relevant to the particular schema.
  • Once they are triggered, they are closely tied to
    high levels of negative affect.

69
Early Maladaptive Schemas
  • Vaz Serra (2005) correlated the 23 QVS to the
    Schema Questionnaire by Young and Brown, 1989.
  • The sample comprised 180 indivíduals 90 were
    under treatment due to anxiety disorders (Social
    Phobia, Panic Disorder, GAD, PTSD, Specific
    phobias, OCD, etc.) and 90 were normals, matched
    to the sample of patients.

70
Early Maladaptive Schemas
Patients (90)
Normals (90)
p
N180
Age
Mean
31.067
31.244
N.S
S.D.
9.455
10.274
23 QVS total
50.722
31.756
0.000
Mean
S.D.
11.144
7.291
Young total
Mean
336.078
207.422
0.000
S.D.
98.568
48.132
71
Early Maladaptive Schemas
23 QVS total
N180
Young total
.803
P .000 for all
Correlations
Schemas
72
Early Maladaptive Schemas
  • A stepwise regression, with the total value of
    the 23 QVS as the dependent variable, selected
    the following variables
  • The Young total score, the following schemas and
    D (being or not being patient)
  • Y(1), Y (2), Y (3), Y (5), Y (6), Y (10), Y (15)
    and D.

Df 9 170
F-ratio 57.601
p .000
Squared multiple R .753
73
Meaning of the Schemas
Domain
These schemas mean
  • Y(1) Dependence

Autonomy
  • Y(2) Subjugation/Lack of Individuation
  • Y(3) Vulnerability to Harm and Illness

Connectedness
Worthiness
  • Y(10) Social Undesirability

Expectations and Limits
  • Y(15) Entitlement/Insufficient Limits

74
Conclusions
  • There are reasons to admit the existence of
    individual differences as regards vulnerability
    to stress.
  • The psychological vulnerabilities may be
    understood according to the influence that the
    mental schemas have on the way in which each
    individual processes the information from the
    environment, which then influences attitudes and
    behaviours.
  • 23 QVS proved to be a sensitive instrument in
    detecting vulnerability to stress and
    distinguishing between a large variety of
    psychopathological conditions.

75
Future research topics
  • To make a prospective study in the general
    population in order to know the association
    between vulnerability to stress, social support
    and illness.
  • To perform more clinical research with larger
    samples in order to know what are the predominant
    profiles within the vulnerability to stress
    dimensions.

76
References
77
References
  • Adams,R.D., Victor,M e Ropper,A.H. (1998) 6.ª
    edição do Compêndio de Neurologia McGraw Hill.
  • Beck,A.T. e Emery,G. (1985) Vulnerability The
    Core of Anxiety Disorders pp. 67-81 in Anxiety
    Disorders and Phobias A Cognitive Perspective -
    U.S.A. Basic Books.
  • Brown,G.W. (1993) The role of life events in
    the aetiology of depressive and anxiety disorders
    pp. 23-50 in STRESS From Synapse to
    Syndrome, S.C. Stanford e P. Salmon (eds.)
    Hartcourt Brace Company, Publishers Academic
    Press.
  • Coyne,J.C. e Whiffen,V.E. (1995) Issues in
    personality as diathesis for depression the case
    of sociotrophy-dependency and autonomy-self-critic
    ism Psychological Bulletin, 118 358-378.
  • Cruz,S., Almeida,A., Ferreira,S. e Mendes,A.C.
    (2004) - Qualidade de vida em doentes com
    Esclerose Múltipla estudo da influência da
    vulnerabilidade e da resiliência ao stress na sua
    avaliação Psiquiatria Clínica, 25(2) 107-114.

78
References
  • Kessler,R.C. e Magee,W.J. (1994) The
    disaggregation of vulnerability to depression as
    a function of the determinants of onset and
    recurrence Cap. 9, pp. 239-258 in Stress and
    Mental Health Contemporary Issues and Prospects
    for the Future, W. R. Avison e I. H. Gotlib
    (eds.) - New York Plenum Press.
  • Leighton,A.H. (1998) A Perspective on
    Adversity, Stress and Psychopathology - Cap. 28,
    pp. 506-520 in Adversity, Stress and
    Psychopathology, B.P. Dohrenwend (ed.) New
    York, Oxford Oxford University Press.
  • Mohr and Cox (2001) Multiple Sclerosis
    Empirical Literature for the Clinical Health
    Psychologist Journal of Clinical Psychology, 57
    479-499.
  • Mota,I. M. P. S. (2002) - Percepção de Stress em
    Controladores de Tráfego Aério tese de mestrado
    apresntada à Universidade Fernando Pessoa.
  • Vaz-Serra,A., Firmino,H., Pocinho,F.,
    Figueiredo,A.M. (1991) - Coping Mechanisms and
    Stressful Life Events Acta Psiquiátrica
    Portuguesa, 37 5-12
  • Vaz-Serra,A. (1999) O stress na vida de todos
    os dias Edição de autor Coimbra
    Distribuidora Dinapress.

79
References
  • Vaz-Serra,A. (2000) - Construção de uma escala
    para avaliar a vulnerabilidade ao stress a 23
    QVS - Psiquiatria Clínica, 20 (4) 279-308.
  • Vaz-Serra,A. (2005) Esquemas Mentais e
    Vulnerabilidade ao Stress Psiquiatria Clínica
    (aguarda publicação).
  • Young,J. (1994) Cognitive Therapy for
    Personality Disorders A Schema-Focused Approach
    (Revised edition) Sarasota, Florida
    Professional Resource Press.
  • Young,J., Klosko,J.S. And Weishaar,M.E. (2003)
    Schema Therapy A Practitioners Guide New
    York, London The Guilford Press.
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