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The History of Psychopathology

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The History of Psychopathology A historical perspective on abnormal behavior What is Psychopathology? The study of abnormal thoughts, behaviors, and feelings. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The History of Psychopathology


1
The History of Psychopathology
  • A historical perspective on abnormal behavior

2
What is Psychopathology?
  • The study of abnormal thoughts, behaviors, and
    feelings.
  • Psycho means mind.
  • Pathology means pathogen or organism causing
    disease.

3
Factors that determine whether behavior is
abnormal or not
  • 1.Statistical infrequency
  •  
  • 2.Violation of norms
  •  
  • 3.Personal Distress
  •  
  • 4.Dysfunction
  • Unexpectedness

4
Statistical infrequency
  • Abnormal behavior is often infrequent.
  • mania depression occur in 1 of the pop.

5
Problem
  • Not all unusual behavior is abnormal!!
  • (E.g., superior athletic ability, geniuses)

6
Violation of norms
  • Abnormal behavior often violates the social norms
    of a given culture.
  • (E.g., experiencing hallucinations, talking to
    inanimate objects,)

7
Problem
  • The violation of norms explicitly makes
    abnormality a relative concept.
  • Criminals and prostitutes violate social
    norms, but would not fall within the context of
    abnormal psychology.

8
Personal Distress
  • Behavior may be abnormal if it creates great
    distress.
  • (E.g., people with depression experience
    considerable distress.)

9
Problem
  • Not all distressed individuals are mentally ill
    some mentally ill individuals do not show
    distress (psychopaths).

10
Dysfunction
  • Does the behavior impair an individuals ability
    to function in life (work, personal
    relationships)?
  • (E.g., substance-use disorders)

11
Problem
  • Some individuals with a DSM diagnosis, live
    functional lives (e.g., transvestites).

12
Unexpectedness
  • Distress disability are considered abnormal
    when they are unexpected responses to stressors.
  • E.g., (anxiety disproportionate with the
    situation).

13
Problems with classifying behavior as abnormal
  • Several factors need to be examined.
  • Societal norms may change which behaviors are
    deemed abnormal.
  • E.g., Homosexuality was once classified as a
    mental disorder in the DSM (up till 1973).

14
1. Clinical Psychologist
  • -Ph.D. or Psy.D.
  • -4-7 yrs graduate study
  • -1-year internship in APA accredited hospital or
    mental health facility.
  •  

15
History of Psychopathology
  • Mental illness was thought to be the result of
    supernatural forces (angry Gods, possession by
    demons).
  • Scholars, theologians, and philosophers
    believed a troubled mind was the result of
    displeased Gods or possession.

16
Demonology the Devil made me do it!
  • Abnormal behavior (hallucinations, delusions,
    paranoia) resulted from demonic possession.
  • Treatment drive the evil spirits out of the
    body.
  • -stone-age trephination
  • -exorcism prayers, brews, flogging, starvation,
    etc.

17
Mental illness a biological problem.
  • By 5th century B.C., mental illness--thought to
    be result of biological problem in the brain.
  • -Hippocrates- argued that deviant behavior was
    result of physical causes.
  • -The view that deviant behavior occurs because of
    disease in the body is called Somatogenesis.

18
Hippocrates (contd.)
  • Thought cognitive functioning could be restored
    by balancing the four humors in body  blood,
    black bile, yellow bile, phlegm).

19
The Dark Ages
  • With decline of Roman Greek civilizations/ rise
    of Church as dominant power in Europe, demonology
    makes a come-back!!
  •  
  • Treatment- exorcisms

20
Mental illness witchcraft (1300s)
  • Hallucinations delusions--evidence of
    witchcraft.
  • Most accused were not mentally ill, but forced to
    confess crimes they didnt commit.
  • Treatment beatings/death by hanging or burning.

21
Mentally ill housed in asylums (1500s)
  •  
  • After crusades, mentally ill were confined to
    asylums.
  • Asylums (originally leprosariums), were converted
    after crusades when leprosy was on a decline.
  • Most famous St. Marys of Bethlehem in London
    (founded in 1243). Called Bedlam.
  • Deplorable conditions- little food, little
    patient care, blood letting practices, spread
    of diseases.

22
Asylums became attraction.
  • Bethlehem- became hot tourist spot, where people
    gawked at Londons mentally ill.
  • Treatment- patients were drained of blood
    purposely frightened.

23
Moral Treatment (1790s )
  • Philippe Pinel humanitarian treatment of
    mentally ill in asylums.
  • Patients formerly chained shackled were
    released free to roam the buildings.
  • Treatment cannabis, opium, alcohol.

24
Medical model (recent)
  • Mental illness may have biological,
    psychological, and/or social cause.
  • Treatment drugs, psychotherapy, ECT

25
Psychopathology crime
  • Currently, it is well known that some forms of
    psychopathology predispose individuals to perform
    criminal acts.
  • Some of the mental disorders linked with criminal
    behavior are conduct disorder,
  • antisocial personality disorder, and
    psychopathy.

26
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