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Famous People

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Title: Famous People


1
Famous People
  • Mental illness is more common than you think.

2
Abraham Lincoln
  • suffered from severe and debilitating and on
    occasion suicidal depressions

3
Mary Todd Lincoln
  • Ambitious and educated, she spend considerable
    time and money trying to contact her dead son and
    (and later her husband)
  • She was known to suffer from Schizophrenia.

4
Beethoven
  • bipolar disorder
  • His manic episodes seemed to fuel his
    creativity. He wrote his most famous works during
    times of torment, loneliness, and suffering
    psychotic delusions.

5
Isaac Newton
  • He suffered from several nervous breakdowns in
    his life
  • known for great fits of rage towards anyone who
    disagreed with him which some have labeled
  • Bipolar Disorder

6
Vincent van Gogh
  • The famous artist was labeled peculiar with
    unstable moods most of his short life.
  • He suffered from epileptic seizures
  • Severely Bi-Polar
  • committed suicide at age 37.

7
Winston Churchill
  • Prime Minister of Great Britain during WWII
  • Suffered from what he called black dog
  • severe and serious depression.

8
Linda Hamilton
  • well known for her part with Arnold
    Schwarzenegger in "The Terminator
  • diagnosed with Bi-polar disorder
  • claims that medication is helpful and understands
    she will have to be on medication for the rest of
    her life.

9
lots more.
  • Edgar Allen Poe (poet, writer bipolar
    disorder)
  • Elton John (singer, composer depression)
  • Harrison Ford (actor depression)
  • Jim Carrey (actor, comedian depression)
  • John Nash (Nobel Prize winner schizophrenia)
  • Mark Twain (author, humorist depression)
  • Marlon Brando (actor depression)
  • Alanis Morissette (singer eating disorder)
  • Janet Jackson (singer depression)
  • Marie Osmond (singer postpartum depression)
  • Courtney Love (singer depression)
  • Mike Wallace (news correspondent depression)
  • Sheryl Crow (singer depression)
  • Ray Charles (singer depression)
  • Paula Abdul (dancer, singer eating disorder)
  • Trent Reznor (musician depression)
  • Drew Carey (show host depression)
  • Patty Duke (actress bipolar disorder)
  • Eric Clapton (musician, singer depression)

10
Psychological Disorders
11
What do you think?
  • Write a definition for a psychological disorder.
  • Do not give examples or define specific
    disorders- what does it mean to have a
    psychological disorder?

12

Psychological Disorder
  • distressing harmful disruptive
  • behavior is uncontrollable
  • Unjustified, Irrational

13
Psychological Disorders
  • Must have personal distress and impaired
    functioning

Potential harm to self or others
14
Impairs Functioning
  • Daily life functioning is impaired (one or both)
  • Work/School life
  • Home life
  • Varies throughout time/ culture

15
Diagnosis DSM-IV-TR
  • Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
    Disorders
  • describes specific symptoms and diagnostic
    guidelines for psychological disorders
  • Provides a common language comprehensive
    guidelines to help diagnose

16
Diagnosis
  • Axis I 296.21 Major Depressive Disorder , Single
    Episode
  • Axis I 303.90 Alcohol Dependence
  • Axis II 301.6 Dependent Personality Disorder
  • Axis III None
  • Axis IV Recent Divorce, unemployment
  • Axis V 58

17
Insanity
  • legal definition only
  • unable to determine between right wrong or
    understand consequences

18
Anxiety Disorders
  • An unpleasant emotional state characterized by
    general, vague feelings of tension, fear and
    apprehension

Anxiety
19
  • Anxiety Disorders differ from general feelings of
    anxiety in that
  • Distressing, persistent
  • And/or
  • The behaviors that reduce anxiety

begin to control and dominate life!
20
Anxiety Disorders are
  • Irrational (exaggerated or non existent threats,
    response is out of proportion)
  • Uncontrollable (can not be turned off, even if
    the person wants to)
  • Disruptive (interferes with life)

21
Types of Anxiety Disorders
  • GAD
  • Panic
  • Agoraphobia
  • Phobias
  • PTSD
  • OCD

22
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD)
  • Constant worry about many issues without any real
    cause, seriously interferes with functioning

23
Panic Disorder
  • Panic attackssudden episode of helpless terror
    with high physiological arousal (increased blood
    pressure, heart beat, temp., sweating)
  • Very frightening sufferers live in fear of
    having an attack

24
  • Agoraphobia often develops
  • NOT FEAR OF OUTDOORS
  • Fear of being in situations in which escape might
    be difficult, they dont feel safe- public
    places, crowds, wide open spaces
  • Mostly confined to homes- they are safe there

25
Specific Phobias
  • Intense, irrational fears that may focus on .
  • Inappropriate response to ..

26
Natural environment type
  • the fear of lightning and thunderstorms
    (astraphobia).
  • the fear of heights (acrophobia)

27
Situational type
  • being "afraid of the dark," (nyctophobia).
  • Monophobiafear of being alone
  • Gephyrophobia - Fear of crossing bridges.
  • Ligyrophobia Fear of loud noises.
  • Xenophobia Fear of strangers, foreigners, or
    aliens.
  • the fear of small confined spaces
    (claustrophobia)

28
Blood/injection/injury type
  • the fear of medical procedures including needles
    and injections (aichmophobia)
  • Algobphobiafear of pain
  • Pyrophobiafear of fire
  • Emetophobia Fear of vomiting.
  • Radiophobia Fear of radiation or x-rays
  • Hemophopia (Haemophobia) Fear of blood

29
Animal type
  • the fear of spiders (arachnophobia)
  • Ailurophobiafear of cats
  • Myrmecophobia Fear of ants.
  • Cynophobia Fear of dogs or of rabies.
  • Mottephobia Aversion to moths and butterflies.
  • the fear of snakes (ophidiophobia).

30
Other
  • the fear of clowns (coulrophobia).
  • Anthropophobiafear of men
  • Ephebiphobia Fear/dislike of teenagers.
  • Zapatophobia - Fear of shoes, socks, or sandals.
  • the fear of the number 13 (triskaidekaphobia)

31
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32
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
  • Follows events that produce intense horror or
    helplessness (traumatic episodes)
  • Actual or threatened death and/or injury
  • War, Rape, Accidents, Attacks, Abuse, Rescue
    workers
  • May be delayed after event- onset with trigger

33
  • Core symptoms include
  • Frequent recollection of traumatic event, often
    intrusive and interfering with normal thoughts
  • Avoidance of situations that trigger recall of
    the event
  • Increased physical arousal associated with stress

34
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
  • Obsessionsirrational, disturbing thoughts that
    intrude into consciousness
  • Compulsionsrepetitive actions performed to
    alleviate obsessions

35
  • The compulsions (actions) help to keep away the
    obsessions (thoughts)
  • If the actions are not performedanxiety
  • Observable or mental compulsions

36
OCD Examples
  • Obsessions about getting hurt, hurting someone,
    getting sick, contamination, symmetry
  • Compulsions cleaning, checking, hoarding,
    touching, counting, arranging, ordering,
    repeating phrases

37
Personality Disorders
  • Inflexible pattern of thoughts, emotions and
    behaviors - regardless of situation!
  • deviate from the expectations of the individuals
    culture
  • Antisocial, Borderline, Dependent, Narcissistic

38
Antisocial Personality Disorder
  • Manipulative, charming, con man
  • Cruel, destructive behavior
  • Lacking conscience, no guilt, no responsibility
  • start as conduct disorder (children)

39
Borderline Personality Disorder
  • Instability of self-image, frantic to retain
    relationships
  • Self-destructive behaviors, impulsive
  • Fear of abandonment

40
Dependent Personality Disorder
  • Unable to make decisions or do things on own

41
Narcissistic Personality Disorder
  • self importance
  • need for increased attention
  • Envy
  • arrogance others are inferior

42
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43
Dissociative Disorders
  • literally a dis-association of memory
  • person suddenly becomes unaware of some aspect of
    their identity or history
  • unable to recall except under special
    circumstances (e.g., hypnosis)
  • dissociative amnesia, dissociative fugue,
    dissociative identity disorder

44
Dissociative Amnesia
  • Memory loss the only symptom
  • Often selective memory loss surrounding traumatic
    events
  • person still knows identity and most of their past

45
Dissociative Amnesia
  • Margie and her brother were recently victims of a
    robbery. Margie was not injured, but her brother
    was killed when he resisted the robbers.
  • Margie was unable to recall any details from the
    time of the accident until four days later.

46
Dissociative Fugue
  • Amnesia with a journey involved often with
    identity replacement
  • leaves home
  • develops a new identity
  • apparently no recollection of former life
  • If fugue wears off
  • old identity recovers
  • new identity is totally forgotten

47
Dissociative Fugue
  • Jay, a high school physics teacher in New York
    City, disappeared three days after his wife
    unexpectedly left him for another man.
  • Six months later, he was discovered tending bar
    in Miami Beach. Calling himself Martin, he
    claimed to have no recollection of his past life
    and insisted that he had never been married.

http//www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/153847241
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48
Dissociative Identity Disorder
  • 2 or more distinct personalities manifested by
    the same person at different times, VERY rare and
    controversial disorder
  • Most report recall of torture or sexual abuse as
    children and show symptoms of PTSD
  • Pattern typically starts prior to age 10
    (childhood)

49
Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID)
  • Norma has frequent memory gaps and cannot account
    for her whereabouts during certain periods of
    time.
  • While being interviewed by a clinical
    psychologist, she began speaking in a childlike
    voice. She claimed that her name was Donna and
    that she was only six years old.
  • Moments later, she seemed to revert to her adult
    voice and had no recollection of speaking in a
    childlike voice or claiming that her name was
    Donna.

50
Psychotic Disorders
  • Psychotic loss of contact w/reality-
    irrational, distorted

51
Schizophrenia
  • Disordered thoughts/ communications/
  • inappropriate emotions, bizarre behavior

52
Symptoms of Schizophrenia
  • Hallucinations
  • Seeing hearing things that are not there
  • Command (something/ someone giving orders)

53
Symptoms of Schizophrenia
  • Delusions
  • Persecution (theyre out to get me! paranoia)
  • Grandeur (God complex, megalomania)
  • being controlled (the CIA is controlling my brain
    with a radio signal)

54
Symptoms of Schizophrenia
  • disorganized speech (e.g., word salad)
  • jumping from idea to idea without the benefit of
    logical association
  • Paralogicon the surface, seems logical, but
    seriously flawed
  • e.g., Jesus was a man with a beard, I am a man
    with a beard, therefore I am Jesus

55
Symptoms of Schizophrenia
  • Disorganized behavior
  • behavior is inappropriate for the situation
  • e.g., wearing sweaters and overcoats on hot days
  • Emotion is inappropriately expressed
  • no emotion at all in face or speech, laughing at
    very serious things, crying at funny things

56
Types of Schizophrenia
  • Paranoid type
  • delusions of persecution, believes others are
    spying and plotting
  • delusions of grandeur, believes others are
    jealous, inferior, subservient

57
Catatonic type
  • unresponsive to surroundings, purposeless
    movement, parrot-like speech
  • usually marked by immobility for extended
    periods

58
Disorganized type
  • disorganized speech and behavior
  • Childlike
  • Inappropriate emotions
  • delusions and hallucinations with little meaning

59
  • Vulnerability
  • Cognitive impairments
  • Social Anxiety
  • Odd ideas

WHERE DOES IT COME FROM?
PSYCHOSIS!
Reinforcement Social stress Isolation Drug/Alcoho
l abuse
Early Causes Genetic Predisposition Prenatal
Factors
Nature AND Nurture!
60
Mood Disorders
  • Significant and persistent disruption in mood,
    causing impaired cognitive, behavioral, and
    physical functioning
  • Major depression
  • Dysthymic disorder
  • SAD
  • Bipolar disorder

61
Major Depression
  • extreme and persistent feelings of despondency,
    worthlessness and hopelessness that disturb
    everyday functioning

62
  • Difficulty sleeping, eating, concentrating
  • May have suicidal thoughts, may not be able to
    carry out plan

63
Dysthymic Disorder
  • Chronic, low-grade depressed feelings that are
    not severe enough to be major depression (Im sad
    all the time and Im not sure why)
  • May develop in response to trauma, but does not
    decrease with time
  • Usually does not severely impair functioning
  • Over two years

64
Seasonal Affective Disorder
  • Episodes of depression occur in fall and winter
    then subside in spring and summer (Seasonal
    regularity)

65
Bipolar Disorders
  • Mood levels swing from severe depression to
    extreme euphoria (mania), can have normal in
    between
  • No regular relationship to time of year (SAD)
  • Can vary in length of time for depression and
    mania

66
  • When MANIC
  • Supreme self-confidence
  • Grandiose ideas and movements, little effort in
    carrying out plans
  • Flight of ideas
  • Aggressive, hostile, wild, incomprehensible,
    violent

67

PET scans show that brain energy consumption
rises and falls with emotional swings
68
Therapies
69
  • There are over 250 identifiable types of
    psychotherapy, though the most influential are
  • Psychoanalytical Therapies
  • Humanistic Therapies
  • Cognitive Therapies
  • Behavior Therapies
  • Group and Family Therapies
  • Psychosurgery
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Any therapist who uses a combination of therapies
    is said to be using an eclectic approach to
    therapy

70
Therapeutic Perspectives
  • Psychoanalysis - assumes that many psychological
    problems are fueled by the childhood repression
    of impulses and conflicts
  • Humanistic - goal is to boost self-fulfillment by
    helping people grow in self-awareness and
    self-acceptance.

71
Therapeutic Perspectives
  • Cognitive - attempt to teach people new, more
    adaptive ways of thinking and acting
  • Behaviorists - believe that problem behaviors are
    the problem, and the goal is to simply eliminate
    or unlearn the problem behavior

72
Types of Behavior Therapies
  • Systematic Desensitization attempt to gradually
    substitute a positive response for a negative
    response to a harmless stimulus.
  • Implosive Therapy floods patients with their
    worst fears first, in hopes that by confronting
    them, theyll overcome them.
  • Aversive conditioning replace a positive response
    to a harmful stimulus with a negative response.

73
Therapeutic Perspectives
  • Group therapy is generally for people
    experiencing family conflicts or those whose
    behavior is distressing to others.
  • Benefits
  • others have same disorder
  • share therapy ideas
  • receive feedback
  • you are not alone

74
Therapeutic Perspectives
  • Methods
  • Usually groups of six to ten individuals
  • Averaging up to 90 minutes per week
  • Family Therapy promotes the idea that families
    are a unit that depends on each member to be
    positive and to communicate

75
Therapeutic Perspectives
  • Psychosurgery
  • Surgery that removes or destroys brain tissue in
    an effort to change behavior.
  • Once popular, but no more, a lobotomy cuts the
    nerves that connect the frontal lobe to the
    emotion-controlling centers in the inner-brain.

76
Therapeutic Perspectives
  • Psychopharmacology
  • The study of the effects of drugs on the mind and
    behavior
  • Introduced in the 1950s
  • Greatly reduced those confined to a hospital
  • currently applied to just about anything

77
Types of Drugs
  • Antianxiety Drugs
  • Are used for the purpose of alleviating the
    symptoms stemming from frightening situations and
    fear-inducing stimuli
  • IE. Xanax, Valium

78
Types of Drugs
  • Antipsychotic Drugs
  • Drugs used for the purpose of calming psychotic
    patients those patients with fundamental mental
    derangement (such as schizophrenia)
  • IE. Thorazine, Clozaril, Haldol

79
Types of Drugs
  • Antidepressant Drugs
  • The purpose is to lift people up from a state of
    depression
  • IE. Prozac, Paxil, Zoloft
  • Lithium is an anti-depressant used mainly for
    manic-depressives (bipolar)

80
Some Criticisms of Drug Therapy
  • Doesnt address the root causes of behavior
    disorders
  • May cause addiction
  • Increased risks for suicide with some drugs?
  • May cause other symptoms, disorders or diseases

81
  • Alternative Therapies

82
Therapeutic Touch
  • A practitioner moves their hands a few inches
    from a patients body, purportedly pushing
    energy fields into balance

83
Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing (EMDR)
  • Usually for disorders associated with trauma and
    anxiety.
  • A patient is asked to close their eyes and to
    think about a traumatic scene from their life.
  • A therapist waves their hand in front of their
    eyes as they are thinking, causing rapid eye
    movement

Does this resemble the stress-less REM of sleep?

84
Light Exposure Therapy
  • Especially for seasonal affective disorder, or
    depression brought on seasonal changes from
    summer to winter (less light). The therapy
    includes timed doses of intense light in light
    boxes.

85
Electroconvulsive Therapy
  • Patients brains are given momentary shock
    treatments, generally for about 30 seconds.
  • Patients are given an anesthetic so that they are
    not conscious, and a muscle relaxant to prevent
    any injuries that may occur from convulsions.

86
  • Electroconvulsive Therapy
  • Used in cases of deep depression, but
    historically used for almost anything determined
    to be abnormal behavior.
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