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Preview. Basic Issues of Mental Disorders Diagnostic issues Perspectives to study mental disorders The idea of multiple causation Sex differences in diagnosis. Mental Disorders, Basic Concepts. “Mental Disorder” controversy Symptom vs. Syndrome
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Preview • Basic Issues of Mental Disorders • Diagnostic issues • Perspectives to study mental disorders • The idea of multiple causation • Sex differences in diagnosis
Mental Disorders, Basic Concepts • “Mental Disorder” controversy • Symptom vs. Syndrome • symptom: individual characteristic of thought, feelings, behaviors • syndrome: constellation of symptoms an individual shows • Syndrome • clinically significant detriment • internal source of distress • involuntary manifestation
Issues with Diagnosis • reliability: individual diagnosticians reach the same conclusions using the same system • DSM-IV: observable characteristics to maximize reliability • validity: the extent to which the system’s categories are clinically meaningful • Labeling people
Perspectives on Mental Disorders • Biological Perspective • mental disorders as physical diseases • brain abnormalities • chemical imbalances • birth difficulties • heritability
Perspectives on Mental Disorders • Psychodynamic Perspective • Sigmund Freud • Unconscious conflicts and drives • Early childhood trauma • therapy helps person become aware of underlying conflicts
Perspectives on Mental Disorders • Cognitive Perspective • conscious thoughts • learned maladaptive thought patterns cause mental disorder • Behavioral Perspective • learned maladaptive patterns of behavior cause mental disorder
Perspectives on Mental Disorders • Sociocultural Perspective • larger culture important to development of mental disorders • supporting evidence from culture-bound syndromes • Koro in Southeast Asia • Anorexia and Bulimia in North America and Western Europe
High Disorder manifested Amount of stress Disorder not manifested Low High Low Predisposition for the disorder Multiple Causation • Predisposing causes • in place before onset • make person susceptible • inherited characteristics • learned beliefs • sociocultural beliefs
High Disorder manifested Amount of stress Disorder not manifested Low High Low Predisposition for the disorder Multiple Causation • Precipitating causes • immediate events that bring on the disorder (stress) • loss (e.g., loved one, job) • perceived threat • when predisposition high, precipitating event may be small
Multiple Causation • Maintaining causes • consequences of the disorder • keep disorder going once it begins • sometimes positive consequences (e.g., extra attention) • often negative consequences (e.g., lack of friends)
Sex Differences in Prevalence • Large sex differences in prevalence • Differences in Reporting • men report less psychological distress than women • don’t admit distress? • Physiological vs. psychological distress • tradeoff? • Men use more alcohol and drugs • men seem to express anger more than distress
Diagnosed as histrionic personality Diagnosed as antisocial personality Bias in Diagnosis • diagnose men with “male” disorders and women with “female” disorders • Ford & Widiger (1989) • antisocial = “male” disorder • histrionic = “female” disorder
Differences in Experiences • Men & women have different social experiences • Women • abuse from spouses • abuse in childhood • traditional roles • As employment for genders becomes more similar, gender gap in some disorders decreases
Summary • Symptom vs. Syndrome in disorders • Diagnostic issues of reliability validity • Biological, Sociocultural, Behavioral, Psychodynamic, Cognitive perspectives • Predisposing, Precipitating, Maintaining factors • Why sex differences in diagnosis?