Use LEFT and RIGHT arrow keys to navigate between flashcards;
Use UP and DOWN arrow keys to flip the card;
H to show hint;
A reads text to speech;
11 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
psychological disorders stereotypes
|
neurotic, crazy, uncurable (not true, most get better), violent and dangerous (only small percentage), and behave in bizarre ways (true only w/ small percentage)
|
|
historical perspective
|
- people have always appeared to gave disorders, it didn't just occur randomly
- early on people thought disorders were the result of evil spirits - during rennaisance, people thought psychological disorders could be treatd by drawing blood out - only in the last 60 years have drugs been developed |
|
people's view of disorders today
|
- most think of disorders in the medical model
- usefullness of psychiatric diagnoses - neuroces/melancholia |
|
critics of mental disorder medical model
|
- labeling theorists
- once someone recieves diagnosis other peope who know them form a label about them |
|
Rosenhan's famous study
|
- usually not long term
|
|
tough part about psychological disorders
|
- when do normal behaviors become abnormal
- forgetting -> alzeimers? - double-checking -> OCD? - emotional outbursts -> mood disorder? - high-energy child -> ADHD? |
|
when is it a mental disorder?
|
criterion:
1. statistical deviance 2. cultural deviance 3. emotional distress normal: 1. common 2. acceptable 3. low abnormal 1. rare 2. unnacceptable 3. high (adaptive, disfunction, maladaptive) |
|
diagnosing an illness
|
- categorize mental disorders w/ DSM-IV
- 5 axes or sections |
|
treating psychological disorders
|
types of therapy
- insight - behavioral: classical an operant conditioning - pharmacotherapy: drugs (found by accident), lithium -> skitzophrenia - music/art therapy - labotamy: severing the brain- taking a small nie up though the eye and severe right and legt hemisphere (serious side-effects... not a cure, 50's and 60's) |
|
shock-therapy
|
still used today but only as last resort (still some severe side-effects)
|
|
who provides these treatments?
|
- clinical or counseling psychologists w/ a graduate degree
- psyhiatrists (medical school + 2 more years) - drugs |