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Counseling the Psychologically Impaired

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Title: Counseling the Psychologically Impaired


1
Counseling the Psychologically Impaired
  • Recognition and Treatment of Mental Disorders

2
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3
  • First recorded depiction of mental illness - 3000
    B.C. in Egypt - Senile Dementia
  • First references to melancholia and hysteria
    found as early as 2600 B.C.
  • Hippocrates (460-377 B.C.) first to place
    psychiatric conditions within secular and
    naturalistic domain of medicine.

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5
Introduction
  • What is a mental disorder
  • How do we define and recognize these disorders?
  • What different types of disorders exist?
  • What causes mental disorders?

6
Epistemology study of the nature of knowledge
  • There are balls and there are strikes and I call
    them as they are (realism - Middle Ages),
  • There are balls and there are strikes and I call
    them as I see them (middle ground - DSM IV),
  • There are no balls and there are no strikes until
    I call them (nominalism - no reality outside the
    mind of the observer)

7
  • Medical illnesses are defined on a widely varied
    conceptual basis, reflecting our historically
    evolving concept of disease.
  • Mental disorders have also been defined by a
    variety of concepts (distress, dyscontrol,
    disadvantage, disability, inflexibility,
    etiology, statistical deviation)

8
  • Before post world war II, the majority of
    patients classified were severely ill ind. living
    in asylums, there were fewer and more easily
    defined categories of mental disorders.

9
  • The ever increasing number of new categories
    meant to describe the less impaired outpatient
    population raises the question of where
    psychopathology ends and the wear and tear of
    every day life begins.

10
  • The DSM I had 106 different diagnostic categories
  • The DSM II had 182
  • The DSM III listed 265
  • The DSM III R included 292
  • What is the effect of this increase?

11
Multiple Diagnosis
  • 1. The removal of diagnostic exclusion criteria
  • 2. The profusion of new categories
  • 3. The division of old categories
  • 4. The use of structured interviews in clinical
    practice

12
Question
  • 1. Has psychiatry taken upon itself the task of
    pathologizing statistically or morally deviant
    individuals?
  • 2. Could the use of an over-inclusive definition
    of mental disorder give the profession a wider
    purview of influence and social control than it
    can reasonably handle?

13
What is a mental disorder?
  • DSM-IV Definition
  • A significant behavior that occurs in an
    individual that is associated with distress or
    disability, or an increased risk for suffering
    death, pain, disability, or an important loss of
    freedom. This syndrome must not be due to a
    culturally sanctioned response.

14
How do we define and identify mental disorders?
  • Mental disorders are generally characterized as
    abnormal behaviors
  • Abnormal behaviors can be defined
  • Statistically
  • Culturally
  • Personal Distress
  • Maladaptive Behavior

15
  • The DSM mental disorders are best understood as
    descriptive syndromes likely to assist in our
    increased understanding of the underlying
    disease, but only in selected cases do they,
    actually represent such diseases.

16
Historical Views of Abnormal Behavior
  • Evil Spirits
  • Exorcism
  • Birth of Reason
  • Hippocrates- Science
  • Reason Lost
  • Witch Hunts
  • Reason Returns
  • Psychology-Wundt
  • Psychopathology and DSM (1952, 65, 74, 80, 87-R,
    94)

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18
History of the DSM
  • DSM I
  • 1952
  • Myers psychobiological view
  • Disorders cause by personality REACTION
  • DSM II
  • 1968
  • Basically the same but references to reaction
    were removed

19
History of DSM cont.
  • DSM III
  • Published in 1980
  • Free from theories of etiology
  • Initiates use of Multi-axis system
  • DSM III-R
  • 1987 Revisions made to clarify diagnoses
  • DSM IV
  • Published 1994
  • Categorical
  • Cultural and ethnic considerations
  • Not based on deviant behaviors

20
DSM IV-TR
  • Most current version to date
  • Published in 2000
  • No changes to diagnoses or criteria
  • Changes made to text that was considered
    ambiguous
  • Update of statistical data from new studies.

21
DSM IV-TR Categories
  • Diagnoses usually made in infancy, childhood, and
    adolescence.
  • Delirium, Dementia, and Amnesic and other
    cognitive disorders.
  • Mental disorders due to a Medical Condition
  • Substance Related Disorders
  • Schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders

22
DSM IV-TR Categories Cont.
  • Mood Disorders
  • Anxiety Disorders
  • Somatoform Disorders
  • Factitious Disorders
  • Dissociate Disorders
  • Sexual and Gender Disorders
  • Eating Disorders

23
DSM IV-TR Categories
  • Sleeping Disorders
  • Impulse Control Disorders
  • Adjustment Disorders
  • Personality Disorder
  • Other conditions
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