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The psychological explanations

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EVALUATION OF PSYCHODYNAMIC THEORY ... The psychodynamic approach ignores the role of genetic factors. The behavioural approach ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The psychological explanations


1
Schizophrenia
  • The psychological explanations

2
Psychodynamic approach
  • Freud argued that conflicts and traumas are
    important in the development of schizophrenia.
  • Schizophrenics have regressed to a state of
    primary narcissism.
  • In this state the ego has not separated from the
    id.
  • As a result schizophrenics cannot interact with
    reality as their ego does not function properly

3
EVALUATION OF PSYCHODYNAMIC THEORY
  • It is very speculative, and is not supported by
    much evidence.
  • The notion that adult schizophrenics resemble
    infants in many ways is not very sensible.
  • The psychodynamic approach ignores the role of
    genetic factors.

4
The behavioural approach
  • Early experiences of punishment may lead children
    to retreat into a rewarding inner world. This
    leads to the child being given labels such as
    odd.
  • According to Scheffs labelling theory,
    individuals who have been labelled as odd or
    peculiar may continue to act in ways that
    conform to these labels.

5
BEHAVIOURAL APPROACH
  • The bizarre behaviour may be rewarded through
    attention and sympathy (a secondary gain).
  • The bizarre behaviour becomes increasingly
    exaggerated, and is eventually labelled as
    schizophrenia.

6
Constant reinforcement
Punishment
Withdrawal
Labelled as odd
Reinforced by attention
Conforming to label
7
Evaluation
  • Schizophrenics often respond to reinforcement
    when used in therapy. For example, schizophrenics
    have learned to make beds, and comb their own
    hair when rewarded for doing so (Ayllon and
    Azrin)
  • Ignores genetic evidence
  • Trivialises a very serious disorder.

8
Social factors
  • Interpersonal communication (Bateson et al.s
    double-bind theory)
  • Expressed emotion
  • Stress
  • The social causation hypothesis
  • This hypothesis was designed to explain why it is
    that schizophrenics tend to belong to the lower
    social classes

9
DOUBLE BIND THEORY
  • BATESON 1956- a factor causing Schizophrenia is
    the destructive communication of family members
  • A mother may tell a child
  • she loves him/her, but her
  • tone of voice is not loving

10
EVALUATION
  • MISHCLER AND WAXLER propose the opposite of
    double bind theory
  • They proposed that the presence of a
    Schizophrenic in a household causes the
    communication problems
  • Evidence from this comes from the fact that
    mothers, when talking to their schizophrenic
    daughters were aloof and unresponsive, but
    interact normally with their non-schizophrenic
    daughters

11
SOCIAL CAUSATION HYPOTHESIS
  • Schizophrenia is 8x more common amongst people of
    lower social class
  • They tend to have more stressful lives because of
    poverty, unemployment, poorer health, and
    discrimination
  • Higher stress, according to the diathersis stress
    model, makes people more vulnerable to
    Schizophrenia

12
SOCIAL DRIFT HYPOTHESIS
  • This proposes that people who develop
    Schizophrenia are more likely to lose their jobs
    and so social status is reduced.
  • So Schizophrenia reduces social status
  • If this is the case, then Schizophrenics should
    belong to a lower social class than their parents
  • TURNER AND WAGENFELD found that fathers of
    Schizophrenics tended to belong to lower social
    classes
  • This evidence supports social causation, not
    social drift

13
STRESS
  • DAY ET AL 1987 carried out a study in several
    different countries. They found that
    Schizophrenics tended to have experienced a high
    number off stressful life events a few weeks
    before the onset of the disorder

14
EXPRESSED EMOTION
  • Despite lack of support for Double Bind theory,
    there is evidence to show that family interaction
    does play a role in maintaining symptoms in
    Schizophrenics
  • The crucial factor is the amount of expressed
    negative emotion, e.g. shouting, criticising,
    hostility

15
EVIDENCE FOR EXPRESSED EMOTION
  • KAVANAGH 1992 found that schizophrenics who
    live in families with high EE are four times more
    likely to relapse than those in families with low
    EE

16
EVALUATION
  • Cause and effect have not been established
  • Does the family casue the relapse of the
    individual?
  • OR
  • Does the presence of the individual casue the
    expressed emotion?

17
DIATHESIS STRESS MODEL
  • This proposes that a mental disorder involves a
    predisposition to the disorder (biological) and a
    stressor which triggers the disorder
  • There is a clear genetic link with schizophrenia
    but not everyone who inherits the gene goes on
    to develop the disorder

18
TREATMENT
  • If the cause of a disorder is biological, then
    the treatment should be biological
  • Schizophrenia is most commonly treated with drugs
  • However these provide relief, but are not a cure
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