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Chapter 18: Mental Disorders

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1 Chapter 18: Mental Disorders
For those living with mental disorders, the world can often seem like a distorted and frightening place.

2 Warning: As we progress through chapter 18, some of you may be tempted to say, “Hey, that sounds like me…oh, and that’s me, too!” Many of us will feel like we share some of the same characteristics as some of these mental disorders; however, it does not mean we have the disorder. The same type of thing can happen when we look up information on Web MD or other websites. This is a normal temptation. Anyone of us can share some of the symptoms described in this chapter. On a second note, there is nothing wrong with having a mental disorder. Just like any other syndrome or disease, it is beyond the person’s control.

3 The Nature of Mental Disorders
A. It is extremely difficult to define a mental disorder. 1. A handful of the disturbed are dangerous, the average mental patient is confused and withdrawn, bothering no one. 2. Statistically, mental patients are less violent than those making up the “normal” general public. 3. Emotionally disturbed people are not that much different from you or your friends in most areas, except for the exaggeration of certain behaviors. 4. The person distorts or exaggerates characteristics that are shared by all of us. It comes down to a matter of degree.

4 If mental health is all a matter of degree, this implies that we’re all a little crazy—or at least we all have the potential to be crazy. Writers like Edgar Allan Poe, Rod Serling, and Stephen King know all about this continuum. They describe people who are walking a tightrope between madness and normalcy and who can fall at any time. If their stories were about people who were just severely disturbed, they wouldn’t be as compelling.

5 B. Definitions of Abnormal Behavior
1. There is something “abnormal” in all “normal” people. 2. One very workable definition of those who do need help has three parts to it: a. The person suffers from discomfort more or less continuously. 1) Suffers from extreme anxiety 2) Suffers from endless worry 3) Suffers from long periods of depression 4) The person feels that something is wrong with his or her life far more than the average person does. b. Possibly the person behaves in a bizarre fashion. 1) He or she constantly misinterprets what is going on and what others are doing or saying. 2) He or she is afraid to go to work or school. 3) He or she falls apart over minor things or sinks into depression.

6 c. People who need help can be very inefficient.
1) They are unable to perform their life roles properly. a) An alcoholic who refuses to accept that there is a problem. b) A person who does nothing while his or her family life is falling apart. c) A parent at home with children who cannot even cope with the dirty dishes. 3. Many people in need of help have trouble getting along with others and are typically inflexible. 4. Another characteristic is that these people constantly see a threatening environment.

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8 II. Classifying Disorders—The DSM-V (It was updated in 2013)
A. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders V—A book that classifies the symptoms of mental problems into formal categories. B. Remember that even though these categories have names and symptoms, no person really fits into any one category perfectly, and symptoms overlap with one another. C. The DSM system is used only to provide some degree of order when trying to decide the kind of problem the patient has.

9 Quick Review What are some signs of abnormal behavior?
Continuous discomfort Acting in a bizarre fashion Inefficiency Inflexibility Constantly perceiving a threatening environment

10 One of the problems of labeling someone mentally ill is the stigma attached to the label. There’s nothing wrong with labels; we use them all the time. But when the labels limit us, because of our own shame or the attitudes of others, then the labels become destructive. Mental illness is a heavy load in itself, and each of us needs to avoid attaching any extra burdens with our own stereotypes and irrational fears. Mental illness is serious. Mental illness is treatable.

11 III. Anxiety Disorders A. Anxiety—A generalized feeling of apprehension and pending disaster. B. Anxiety Disorder—A disorder whose major symptom is anxiety. 1. Panic Disorder—A type of anxiety disorder in which one cannot relax and is plagued by frequent and overwhelming attacks of anxiety. 2. Phobic Disorder—A type of anxiety disorder in which a person becomes disabled and overwhelmed by fear in the presence of certain objects or events. a. Specific Phobia—A major anxiety that arises when faced with a specific object or situation, such as a snake, dog, elevator, heights, and so on. b. Agoraphobia—The fear of leaving a familiar environment, especially home.

12 Added Information… It is very likely that a person with a panic disorder will develop phobias. If a person has an anxiety attack near a dog, she may associate the dog with the attack and later feels uneasy around dogs (conditioning – chapter 7). Anxiety attacks can last one –two minutes. This seems short, but the attacks can be very overwhelming.

13 3. Obsessive-compulsive Disorder—Having continued
thoughts (obsession) about performing a certain act over and over (compulsion). a. Obsession—An endless preoccupation with an urge or thought. b. Compulsion—A symbolic, ritualized behavior that a person must keep acting out in order to avoid anxiety. Crash Course OCD and Anxiety Disorders Video: 48 Hours: Obsessive Compulsive Disorder

14 Additional Information:
People with OCD are usually good workers. They strive to do a perfect job. Freud’s term for OCD was Anal Retentiveness or Anal Fixation People with OCD seem to have an imbalance of serotonin. Antidepressants have been found to be an effective treatment. Activity: Psychological Disorder Chapter 18 WS #1

15 Quick Check…Name the Disorder
1. A person must chew food exactly twenty-five times before swallowing. Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders 2. A person is suddenly overcome with a racing heart, difficulty breathing, and a feeling of impending doom for no apparent reason. Panic Disorder 3. A person has an intense fear of learning. Phobia (specifically Sophophobia)

16 IV. Somatoform Disorders
A. Somatoform Disorder—Condition in which psychological issues are expressed in bodily symptoms in the absence of any real physical problems. 1. Conversion Disorder—Disorder in which a serious psychological trauma is changed into a symbolic physical dysfunction. (Very Rare) a. Hysterical Blindness—Someone becomes blind after seeing something horrific like a person being tortured. b. Hysterical Paralysis—A person becomes “paralyzed” after a traumatic event like a train wreck. (The person will not be able to move. Physically they should be able to move, but if you were to put a pin in her leg, she would not be able to feel it. They are not faking…it is VERY real, but unexplainable.)

17 2. Hypochondriasis—Disorder characterized by
feeling excessive concern about one’s health and exaggerating the seriousness of minor physical complaints. a. Usually comes about by associating illness with attention. (Not the same as Munchhausen Syndrome.) b. Spend lots of time at the doctor’s office, and can think a headache is a brain tumor or the is pneumonia.

18 Interesting Facts Conversion Disorder was called Hysteria during the time of Freud. Some father’s experience sympathy pains when their wives are pregnant. You wouldn’t call this a disorder but if it went further, and the husbands’ bellies actually began to enlarge, conversion disorder would be a fitting description.

19 V. Dissociative Disorders
A. Dissociative Disorders—Disorders in which a part of one’s life becomes disconnected from other parts. 1. Psychogenic Amnesia—A dissociative disorder in which traumatic events disappear from memory. a. Selective Forgetting—Forgetting only things that are very traumatic. 1) A soldier might forget his battalion and everything about fighting in a war if he experienced a traumatic event. 2. Psychogenic Fugue—The condition of having amnesia for one’s current life and starting a new one somewhere else. a. More common among men. b. Doesn’t last long, and when the person “comes out of it”, he or she cannot remember what happened during the fugue state.

20 3. Dissociative Identity Disorder—Condition in which a
person divides himself or herself into two (possibly more) separate personalities that can act independently. a. Formerly called Multiple Personality Disorder. b. Often confused with Schizophrenia; however, with DID, a person has two or more sides that tend to live independently, but the basic core person is the same. c. Extremely rare d. Typically Include: haunted, confused personality, childhood abuse, a history of traumatic experiences, and a long-term habit of escaping from almost any problem.

21 Interesting Facts When you associate you join together. When you dissociate, you separate. In this case, you separate a memory from your self. During hypnosis, you are asked to “leave yourself” for a while. You are still in full control; you are simply focused. In the case of dissociative disorders, your ability to control this “disconnection” is impaired. Organic Amnesia usually only causes problems with RECENT memories that become hazy. The person may have difficulty paying attention, and she may seem disoriented; however, with psychogenic amnesia past memories are lost, too. Attention may be seemingly unimpaired. The memory loss is preceded by an argument, a firing, and so on. It seems that different personalities of a sufferer of dissociative identity disorder may serve different functions. For example, one may be the “work personality”, and the other personalities will allow this one to be dominant during the work week for obvious reasons. Or personality A may start a fight, become apprehensive, then fade into the background to let personality B fight the battle.

22 Personality Activity Students will fill out a short personality survey. Students are to answer honestly. Students will turn in their survey when finished. Part II: Students will receive someone else’s survey. Students will read through the survey a couple of times. Students will go and talk to someone else (think chit chat at a party). You are to take on the characteristics of this other person. Use their first name and act how he/she would act. Introduce yourself. Discuss your interests, etc. Visit with a couple of different people. Come back to your seats…discuss. Connect to DID.

23 Sybil Who was Sybil? Movie Activity

24 One Pager After watching Sybil, students will do a one pager in order to analyze dissociative identity disorder in the movie Sybil. Students can write about a variety of topics, but must address DID. Should include a quick intro with thesis (purpose…what will you be writing about). One to two body paragraphs that analyze aspects of DID and Sybil. A final paragraph wrapping up the main idea of your one pager. Look at the rubric. You need to make sure you have checked your essay for mechanics and grammar issues.

25 VI. Mood Disorders A. Mood Disorders—A category of mental disorder characterized by one’s emotional state. It includes depression and mania. 1. Dysthymic Disorder—A moderate depression. a. Comes from Greek; means “low spirits” b. Fairly common problem, and of all mental disorders, most likely to clear up eventually without treatment. c. Referred to as the common cold of mental health. d. May be caused by the death of a loved one. e. Typical symptoms: lack of energy, unhappiness, loss of interest in activities and people, loss of sense of humor, sadness, and rock-bottom feelings of self worth.

26 2. Major Depression—An extremely low emotional
state, severe depression; involves loss of appetite, lack of energy, hopelessness, and suicidal thoughts. a. Most patients have trouble carrying out simple daily tasks. b. Some may even lay motionless in a rolled-up fetal position for hours at a time. c. Many have a great deal of anger at themselves or it is broad and unfocused. d. It can last for a couple of weeks to several months.

27 Draw it! Take 3-4 minutes. Draw a quick picture of what YOU believe depression feels like. The artistic ability doesn’t matter. It can be abstract or realistic in design. Mrs. Fry will call on students to share vocally what they drew. You do not have to SHOW your drawing unless you want to.

28 Discuss it! What are some common reasons that teens get depressed? What are common reasons that all people get depressed? Why do you think more women than men report being depressed?

29 3. Mania—A mood disorder involving extreme
agitation, restlessness, rapid speech, and trouble concentrating. a. It is Greek meaning “mad excitement”. b. Opposite from depression – extreme up moods. c. Flight of Ideas—A confused state in which thoughts and speech go in all directions with no unifying concept. 4. Bipolar Disorders—A disorder with up and down swings of moods from “high” to “low”. a. Formerly called Manic Depressive Disorder. b. People who suffer from major depression or bipolar disorder can become psychotic.

30 5. Cause of Mood Disorders
a. Chemical imbalance 1) Serotonin—The brain chemical that in excess leads to mania; in too low concentration, it leads to depression. b. Most of the time mood disorders correct themselves within 6 months 80-90% of the time. c. Hereditary—Maybe? 1)Depression is psychologically “contagious”. Crash Course: Moods

31 Points to Stress: As noted earlier, an imbalance of serotonin may play a part in anxiety disorders, too. Mania is characterized by rapid speech, restlessness, and agitation. Just as depression may be one way to deal with anxiety, as noted earlier, mania may be one way of overcoming, albeit briefly, the feelings of worthlessness typical of depression. Some psychologists view depression as the flip side of anxiety. Rather than feel anxious, which can be quite disturbing, we become depressed. In fact, antidepressant drugs are often used to treat anxiety disorders—even when no depression is exhibited.

32 Comprehension Check Selective forgetting of events is involved in which kind of dissociative disorder? Amnesia Which mood disorder includes restlessness? Mania or Bipolar Which mood disorder includes temporary loss of interest in activities and people? Dysthymic Disorder Which mood disorder includes frequent thoughts of death or suicide? Major Depression or Bipolar

33 Students will work on Psychological Disorders Chapter 18 WS II

34 VII. Characteristics of Psychotic Disorders
A. Psychosis or Psychotic Disorder—Severe mental disorder involving major problems with emotional responses, disorganized thought processes, and distorted perceptions of the world. 1. Four major symptoms can appear in psychosis, but typically at least two will. a. Thought disorder—a serious distortion of the ability to think or speak in a lucid and coherent way. b. Hallucinating—Seeing or hearing something that is not present. c. Delusion—A belief in something (for example, that you are king or queen) that is not true. d. Psychotics have a great deal of trouble with emotional responses; the emotions shown are inappropriate.

35 VIII. Schizophrenic Disorders
A. Schizophrenia—The most serious mental disturbance, involving loss of contact with reality, thought disorders, hallucinations, and delusions. 1. Schizophrenia results from physical or chemical problems. a. Appears in late adolescence or early adulthood. b. Rarely occurs at any other time. 2. 1/3 of the schizophrenics have one episode and get better; 1/3 have severe symptoms and do not respond to treatment; 1/3 are consistently in and out of mental institutions all their lives. 3. Word Salad—Speech in which words are mixed together incoherently. 4. Clang Associations—Psychotic speech in which words are rhymed.

36 Combined Words Rhymes

37 B. Types of Schizophrenia
1. There are several subtypes of schizophrenia a. Catatonic Schizophrenia—Type of schizophrenia characterized by disturbances of movement. (Don’t move or speak – rare) b. Paranoid Schizophrenia—Schizophrenia marked by strong feelings of suspiciousness and persecution. c. Undifferentiated Schizophrenia—Schizophrenia that lacks any distinguishing symptoms. C. Psychotic Episodes—Periods of psychotic behavior that can alternate with periods of relative coherence and calm. D. Environment may play a small part in this disorder. Read about Michael W. on page

38 E. Research shows that schizophrenics have abnormally
high levels of dopamine—The brain chemical present in excess in schizophrenics, which causes nerve cells to fire too rapidly and leads to thought and speech confusion. 1. Keep in mind that: a. The rapidity of thought with the schizophrenics does not ever resemble that of the manic. Schizophrenics speak and act as if they are exhausted from too much thought. b. The chemical defect in mood disorders does not involve dopamine. That chemical is serotonin. Crash Course: Understanding Schizophrenia

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