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Essentials of Understanding Abnormal Behavior Chapter One

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Title: Essentials of Understanding Abnormal Behavior Chapter One


1
Essentials of Understanding Abnormal
BehaviorChapter One
  • Abnormal Behavior

2
The Concerns of Abnormal Psychology
  • What is abnormal psychology?
  • An area of scientific study aimed at describing,
    explaining, predicting, and modifying behaviors
    that are considered unusual or strange
  • Uses psychodiagnosis attempts to describe,
    assess, and systematically draw inferences about
    an individuals psychological disorder

3
The Concerns of Abnormal Psychology (contd.)
  • Modifying abnormal behavior
  • Therapy program of systematic intervention aimed
    at improving a persons behavioral, affective
    (emotional), or cognitive state

4
Determining Abnormality
  • Psychologists use the Diagnostic and Statistical
    Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)
  • Most widely used classification system of mental
    disorders
  • Currently in its 5th Version DSM V (May 2013)
  • Defines abnormal behavior as a behavioral or
    psychological syndrome or pattern that reflects
    an underlying psychobiological dysfunction, is
    associated with distress or disability, and is
    not merely an expectable response to common
    stressors or losses. (www.dsm5.org)

5
Determining Abnormality (contd.)
  • Limitations of DSM-V definition
  • DSM definition is quite broad and raises
    questions
  • When is a syndrome or pattern of behavior
    significant enough to have meaning?
  • Is it possible to have a mental disorder without
    any signs of distress or discomfort?
  • What criteria are to be used in assessing
    symptoms?

6
Determining Abnormality (contd.)
  • Four major factors in judging psychopathology
  • Distress
  • Deviance (bizarreness)
  • Dysfunction (inefficiency in behavioral,
    affective, or cognitive domains)
  • Dangerousness

7
Cultural Considerations in Abnormality
  • Culture
  • Shared values, beliefs, attitudes and behaviors
    transmitted from generation to generation
  • Powerful determinant of how behavior is defined
    and treated
  • Multicultural limitations
  • How does culture affect our understanding of
    human behavior?

8
Cultural Considerations in Abnormality (contd.)
  • Cultural universality
  • Assumption that origins, processes, and
    manifestations of mental disorders are the same
    across cultures
  • Cultural relativism
  • Belief that lifestyles, cultural values, and
    worldviews affect expression and determination of
    abnormal behavior

9
Sociopolitical Considerations in Abnormality
  • Mental illness as a sociopolitical construction
  • Thomas Szasz
  • Problems in living versus mental illness
  • Must be sensitive to individual value systems,
    societal norms and values, and potential
    sociopolitical ramifications

10
The Frequency and Burden of Mental Disorders
  • Psychiatric epidemiology
  • Study of the prevalence of mental illness in a
    society
  • Prevalence
  • Percentage of individuals in a targeted
    population who have a particular disorder during
    a specific period of time

11
The Frequency and Burden of Mental Disorders
(contd.)
  • Incidence
  • Number of new cases of a disorder that appear in
    an identified population within a specified time
    period
  • Lifetime prevalence
  • The percentage of people in the population who
    have had a disorder at some point in their life

12
The Frequency and Burden of Mental Disorders
(contd.)
  • Figure 1-1 1-year prevalence of mental disorders
    in adult Americans and lifetime prevalence of
    mental disorders in American adolescents

13
Stereotypes about People Who are Mentally
Disturbed
  • Americans tend to be suspicious of people with
    mental disorders
  • Common myths
  • People who are mentally disturbed can always be
    recognized by their abnormal behavior
  • People who are mentally disturbed have inherited
    their disorders

14
Stereotypes (myths) about the Mentally Disturbed
(contd.)
  • Mental illness is incurable Nearly
    three-fourths of people who are hospitalized with
    severe mental disorders will improve and go on to
    lead productive lives.
  • People become mentally disturbed because they are
    weak willed
  • Mental illness is always a deficit Many people
    with mental illness were never cured, but they
    nevertheless made great contributions to
    humanity.
  • Mentally disturbed people are unstable and
    potentially dangerous

15
Historical Perspectives on Abnormal Behavior
  • Prehistoric and ancient beliefs
  • Demonology treated by trephining or exorcism
  • Naturalistic explanations (Greco-Roman)
  • Naturalistic explanations supplanted supernatural
  • Hippocrates believed deviant behavior was caused
    by brain pathology, dysfunction or disease of
    the brain

16
Historical Perspectives on Abnormal Behavior
(contd.)
  • Mass Madness (13th century) Group of people
    exhibit similar symptoms with no apparent cause.
  • Tarantism wild dancing and convulsions assumed
    to be caused by spiders bite
  • Lycanthropy imitating wolves and imagining
    themselves as wolves
  • Witchcraft (15th-17th centuries)
  • The Hammer of Witches (1484) Pope Innocent VIII
    approved the persecution of witches. Two
    priests, Heinrich Kramer and James Sprenger wrote
    Malleus Maleficarum

17
Historical Perspectives on Abnormal Behavior
(contd.)
  • The Reform Movement
  • Philippe Pinel began the moral treatment
    movement, treated patients with kindness and
    reason rather than chains and torture.
  • William Tuke created the York retreat, also
    subscribing to the moral treatment movement.
  • Benjamin Rush (1745-1813) considered the father
    of US psychiatry, trained physicians to treat
    patients with mental disorders and to practice
    humane treatment.
  • Dorothea Dix (1802-1887) Spent 40 years working
    for humane treatment of the mentally ill and
    raised millions of dollars.
  • Clifford Beers (1876-1943) wrote A Mind that
    Found Itself about his own battle with mental
    illness and the treatment he and others
    experienced in 3 mental institutions.

18
Causes Early Viewpoints
  • Biological (organic) view
  • Belief that mental disorders have a physical or
    physiological basis (Griesinger)
  • Kraepelin
  • Symptoms occur in clusters (syndromes) to
    represent mental disorders, each with unique
    cause, course, and outcome
  • Classified mental illness based on organic causes
  • Original basis for Diagnostic Statistical Manual
    of American Psychiatric Association

19
Causes Early Viewpoints (contd.)
  • Biological view gained greater strength with
    discovery of general paresis, a progressively
    degenerative and irreversible physical and mental
    disorder related to late-stage syphallis
  • Fritz Schaudinn (1905) discovered the
    micororganism that actually causes syphilis and
    the resulting neurological deterioration, the
    first definite evidence for medical cause in
    psych. disorder was discovered.

20
Causes Early Viewpoints (contd.)
  • Psychological view
  • Mental disorders are caused by psychological and
    emotional (not biological/organic) factors
  • Mesmerism and hypnotism
  • Josef Breuer
  • Relief by talking about traumatic experiences
  • Cathartic method therapeutic use of verbal
    expression to release pent-up emotional conflicts
  • Sigmund Freud psychoanalysis

21
Contemporary Trends
  • Multicultural psychology
  • Culture, race, ethnicity, gender, age, and
    socio-economic class relevant to understand and
    treat abnormal behavior
  • Mental health professionals need to
  • Increase cultural sensitivity
  • Acquire knowledge of diversity
  • Develop culturally relevant therapy approaches

22
Contemporary Trends (contd.)
  • Figure 1-2 Census 2010 Racial and Ethnic
    Composition of the United States The rapid
  • demographic transformation of the United States
    is illustrated by the fact that minorities
  • now constitute an increasing proportion of the
    population. Several trends are evident.
  • First, within several short decades, people of
    color will constitute a numerical majority.
  • Second, the number of Latino/Hispanic Americans
    has surpassed the number of African Americans.
    Third, mental health providers will increasingly
    be coming into contact with clients who differ
    from them in race, ethnicity, and culture.
  • Source http//www.census.gov/newsroom/release/
    archives/2010_census/cb11-cn125htm

23
Contemporary Trends (contd.)
  • Dimensions related to cultural diversity
  • Social conditioning How we are raised, what
    values are instilled in us, and how we are
    expected to behave in fulfilling our roles
  • Cultural values and influences types of mental
    disorders differ from country to country and
    differences in cultural traditions may influence
    susceptibility to certain emotional disorders.
  • Sociopolitical influences In response to a
    history of prejudice, discrimination, and racism,
    many minorities adopted behaviors important for
    their survival
  • Cultural and ethnic bias in diagnosis Mental
    health professionals are not immune to inheriting
    the prejudicial attitudes

24
Contemporary Trends (contd.)
  • Positive psychology
  • Study of positive human functioning, and the
    strengths and assets of individuals, families,
    and communities
  • Focuses on strengths and assets of people in
    preventing psychological disorders

25
Contemporary Trends (contd.)
  • The drug revolution (1950s)
  • Rapidly and dramatically decreased or eliminated
    troublesome symptoms
  • the drug chlorpromazine (brand name Thorazine)
    was extremely effective in treating agitated
    people with schizophrenia
  • Deinstitutionalization
  • Prescription privileges for psychologists
  • Managed health care
  • Industrialization of health care, whereby large
    organizations in the private sector control the
    delivery of services

26
Contemporary Trends (contd.)
  • Industrialization of health care has brought
    about major trends
  • Business interests are exerting increasing
    control over psychotherapy
  • Current business practices are depressing income
    of practitioners
  • Psychologists are being asked to justify use of
    their therapies
  • Enactment of mental health and substance abuse
    parity legislation

27
Contemporary Trends (contd.)
  • Appreciation for research
  • Breakthroughs in neuroscience
  • Role of neurotransmitters in mental disorders
  • Renewed interest in brain-behavior relationship
    with success of psychopharmacology
  • Increasing exploration of biological bases of
    abnormal behavior
  • Integration of drug therapy with psychotherapy
  • Move toward empirically-based treatments
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