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ArabSoc
IFP Revision Lecture

Senan Alsanjari
Professionalism
• ‘Medical professionalism signifies a set of values, behaviours
  and relationship that underpins the trust the public has in
  doctors’
• The report further describes:
  • That medicine is a vocation in which doctors knowledge, clinical
    skills and judgement are put in the service of protecting and
    restoring human well-being.
Professionalism
• Composed of a doctor’s
  •   Relationship with knowledge
  •   Relationship with colleagues
  •   Relationship with patients
  •   Relationship with society
  •   Relationship with self.
Regulation of Professionalism
• The GMC has two main functions:
  • It holds a list of all registered UK doctors
  • It acts as a professional regulator.
• Why are medical students always threatened when we act like
  normal students?
  • Alcohol
Good Medical Practice
 • Good clinical care
 • Maintaining Practice
 • Teaching and Training
 • Relationship with Patients
 • Working with colleagues
 • Probity
 • Health
Great Minds Think Revising Will Probably Help
Duties of a Health Care
Professional
• Moral duty – Respect patient autonomy
• Professional duty - GMC
• Legal duty - Law
Ethical Practice
• What is ethics?
  •   Duty
  •   Utility
  •   Rights
  •   Virtue
• Ethical Principles
  • Moral Perception
  • Moral reasoning
  • Moral action
Ethical Practice
• Consent
  • This is the “volountary, un-coerced decision made by a
    sufficiently competent or autonomous person based on adequate
    information and deliberation, to accept rather than reject a
    proposed form of action”.
  • Validity judged on the Mental Capacity Act.
• Mental Capacity Act (2005)
  • Primary purpose is to provide a legal framework for acting and
    making decisions on behalf of adults who lack capacity to make
    decisions for themselves.
• Which situations do not require consent?
Importance of Consent
•   Legal duty
•   Respect for patient autonomy (Ethical principle)
•   Respect Patient (Professionalism)
•   Establish relationship of trust with patient
•   Benefits patient
    • Co-operate
    • Jehova’s witness
Ethics in children
• Gillick competence
  • Brief History
  • “whether or not a child is capable of giving the necessary consent
    will depend on the child’s maturity and understanding and nature
    of consent required.”
• Fraser Guidelines
  • They refer to the guidelines set out by Lord Fraser in his
    judgement of the Gillick case which apply specifically to
    contraceptive advice on the basis of a number of key principles.
Competence
• Four principles
  •   Patient must understand information
  •   Patient must retain information
  •   Patient must weigh-up options
  •   Patients must communicate decision.
Memory and Conditioning
• Memory process
  • Encoding
  • Storage
  • Retrieval
• Atkinson-Shiffrin memory model
  • Sensory information
  • Short term memory
  • Long term memory
Atkinson-Shiffrin
Short Term Memory
• This is basically what you are thinking about at any given
  moment.
• Holds limited amount of information for short period of time –
  20 to 30 seconds.
• Capacity
  • 7 +/- 2
  • Increased by chunking
     • Break large amount of information into meaningful information
Long Term Memory
•   Unlimited capacity
•   Requires consolidation of information in short term memory
•   Involves long term potentiation
•   Can improve working memory…how?
•   Retrieval of information
    •   Cues
    •   Context
    •   Level of processing
    •   Organisation of information when learnt
Types of Memory
• Procedural memory
  • Form of memory that involves a sequence of movements or
    actions and enables us to perform various acts or skills.
• Declarative memory
  • Episodic – form of memory that represents our knowledge of
    personally experienced events and the order they occurred.
  • Semantic – form of memory that represents our knowledge of
    words, symbols and concepts including meaning and rules for
    using them.
Question
• A patient comes in requiring bilateral removal of parts of the
  hippocampus. After the surgery, the patient can remember
  everything that occurred before the surgery and has a
  functioning working memory. However, he cannot learn
  anything new that has happened post-surgery but can still
  learn procedural skills without realising he has learnt them.
• Which type of memory is affected?
• Does this patient have amnesia? If so what type?
Classical Conditioning
• The combination of a neutral stimulus with a stimulus which
  does elicit a behavioural response.
• The conditioned stimulus produces no response at first but
  after conditioning it elicits the conditioned response.
• Pavlov’s experiment is a good example to use.
Practical example
• If you take an Arab and put a shawarma platter
  (unconditioned stimulus) in front of them, they will salivate
  (unconditioned response).
• If you couple the shawarma (unconditioned stimulus) with a
  picture of LITTLE RAT (conditioned stimulus), over
  time, repeated exposure will cause the picture of the little rat
  ALONE to cause salivation.
Operant Conditioning
• Form of learning in which an individual’s behaviour is modified
  by its consequences.
• What is the difference between Operant and Classical
  conditioning?
• Reinforcement and punishment are the core tools of operant
  conditioning, are either positive or negative.
• Extinction
Example
• The bird in the box gets a seed when it speaks but when it
  moves and does not speak, the chute closes.
• Therefore, the bird realises that in order to gain a seed it must
  speak.
• This is positive reinforcement.
• Extinction would be no longer giving the seed after the bird
  speaks
Clinical Use
• Cognitive Behavioural Therapy uses Operant conditioning
• Targets emotional response to event and thus modifies
  behaviour.
• Common exam question.
Stress, Illness and Coping
• Understanding the terms stressor, stress response and strain
• Three theories
  • General Adaptation Syndrome
  • Life Events Model
  • Transactional model
General Adaptation Syndrome
• Alarm stage
  • Fight/flight reaction
• Resistance stage
  • Defence / adaptation to stressor
• Exhaustion
  • Failure to adapt to stressor

  The problems with this model?
Life Events Model
• This theory states that an accumulation of life events and
  continuous adjustments is detrimental to health.
• This model measures stress by totalling number of life events
  within a period of time e.g. …
• Problems?
Transactional model
 •   This model is based cognitive appraisal of the stressor.
 •   The effect of the stressor is influenced by coping strategies
 •   Stress results from an imbalance in demands versus resources
 •   The perceived resources include factors such as personality
     traits, family support, experience.

Problem – situations that occur without prior cognitive appraisal
Models of Health and Disability
 • Biological model of disability
 • Social model of disability
 • Bio-psycho-social model of disability

Impairment – loss of normal age-related structure and function
of the body
Disability – result of any social system which does not allow for
inclusion of people with an impairment.
Biological model of disability
• Disease centred approach
• Management of illness revolves around identifying the illness
  from a clinical perspective.
• Then controlling it by medical intervention to cure the disease.
• The biological model advocates an investment of health
  resources to cure disabilities with medical intervention.

Problem with a purely biological approach?
Social model of disability
• Reaction to the dominant medical model of disability.
• This model identifies systemic barriers, negative attitudes and
  exclusion by society that means society is the main
  contributory factor in disabling people.
• Not everyone with an impairment has to be classed as
  disabled.
• Difference between biological and social model?
• Problems?
Bio-Psycho-Social model
• Health is best understood in terms of a combination of
  biological, psychological and social factors.
• This looks at the biological, psychological and social effects.
• Complex interaction between all three.
Health Behaviour
• Any behaviour which has an effect on health is known as a
  health behaviour.
• This can be positive (exercise) or negative (smoking).
• Three main theories that influence health behaviour
  • Health Belief Model
  • Theory of planned behaviour
  • Cognitive dissonance
Health Belief Model
• The model predicts that individuals will act to promote their
  health if they believe:
  • There is a perceived threat
  • The consequence and susceptibility to the threat is severe
  • Recommended actions to deal with the problem are beneficial
  • The benefits of taking action outweigh the barriers.
   Problem?
Example
• Application of the Health Belief Model to prevent the spread
  of HIV/AIDS, individuals would be more likely to practice safe
  sex if they believed:
  •   They are at risk of HIV infection
  •   The consequences of HIV infection are severe
  •   Safe sex practices are effective in reducing the risk of infection
  •   The benefits of safe sex practice outweighs the potential barriers
Theory of Planned Behaviour
• Health behaviour depends on:
  • Attitudes
     • Individual evaluation of a behaviour
  • Subjective norms
     • How society or environment contributes to behaviour
  • Perceived behavioural control
     • The extent to which the individual believes he or she can control
       behaviour
      Problem?
Cognitive Dissonance Theory
Reducing dissonance
• In order to reduce dissonance:
  • Change one or more beliefs
  • Eliminate a cognition
  • Introduce another cognition
Loss, Bereavement and Grief
• Loss – the physical loss of something.
• Bereavement – the process we go through after we lose
  something to which we were emotionally attached.
• Grief – the emotions associated with bereavement.
• Mourning – psychological process resulting from loss and
  process of recovery.
Emotions associated with grief
• Acute Grief – agitation, crying and hallucinations
• Long term – sleep disturbance, sleep withdrawal and
  depression
Process of Mourning
•   Denial
•   Anger
•   Bargaining
•   Depression
•   Acceptance
Pathological grief
• Absent – failure to display symptoms of grief but may show
  severe signs on occasions
• Prolonged – initially is normal grieving, but loss is still central
  after 6 months
Morbidity associated with
bereavement
• Biological
  • ACTH / Cortisol levels rise
  • Lower lymphocyte proliferation
  • Lower cytotoxic T cells
• Psycho/Social
  • Alcohol abuse
  • Neglect symptoms
Common Mental Disorders
• Mental illness – abnormal behaviour associated with reports
  of distressing experienecs.
• Psychosis – an inability to distinguish fantasy from reality and
  is associated with delusions and hallucinations
• Neurosis – is not a psychotic illness and is associated with
  anxiety and low mood.
Biological Model
• Dominated psychiatric profession in the last century.
• Huge amounts of research has gone into this area of
  psychiatry.
• Mental dysfunction is the result of a physical / chemical
  change in the brain.
• This abnormal functioning in the brain should be treated as
  any other physiological illness.
Psychodynamic model
• Behaviour and feelings as adults are rooted in our childhood
  experiences
• Relationships (particularly parenting) are of primary
  importance in determining how we feel and behave
• Our behaviour and feelings are powerfully affected by the
  meaning of events to the unconscious mind
• The symptoms shown are expression of unconscious thought
  and can indicate underlying problem
Behavioural Model
• Mental illness is associated with abnormal behaviour.
• Behaviour is a result of the environment rather than genetics
  and so reject the view that abnormal behaviour has a
  biological basis.
• Abnormal behaviour result from unhelpful learned responses.
Example
• A patient’s fear (phobia) of heights would be explained
  through the process of classical conditioning. Some time in the
  past, she would have learned to associate the emotion of fear
  with the stimulus of being in a high place through a chance
  association between the two stimuli. As a result, she would
  avoid heights, and therefore not have the opportunity to
  relearn the association in a more adaptive way. Treatment
  would involve desensitising the fear through conditioning
  techniques.
Cognitive model
•   Mental illness is an error in thinking
•   View of the world is determined by our thinking.
•   Dysfunctional thinking  dysfunctional view of the world.
•   Therefore treatment targets necessary changes in thinking.
Example
• A patient suffering from a depressed mood after failing a
  driving test may be having negative thoughts not only about
  that specific failure but may be generalising those to other
  areas of her life. She may believe she is a failure in all aspects
  of her life and will never be successful again. These thoughts
  are irrational and polarised, and the therapist would strive to
  teach the patient ways of changing her thoughts. The
  therapist might also emphasise the importance of increasing
  positive reinforcements, and suggest ways in which this might
  be achieved.
Advantages and Disadvantages of
Classificaiton of Mental Illness
• Advantages
  • It gives a diagnosis to the individual
  • It frames the problem and allows goal-directed activity from the
    individual to get better.
• Disadvantages
  • People often want to blame something for their illness, who do
    you blame?
  • Labelling and stigma
     • Felt
     • Enacted
Statistics
Standard Deviation
•   Measure of spread of data
•   Used in normal distributions
•   Calculate variance
•   Standard Deviation is the square root of variance
•   Don’t need to know how to calculate but need to know what
    it means in simple terms…
Normal distribution
• If data is normally distributed it will follow a Bell shape curve
What is a 95% Reference range
• It is calculated
  • Mean + (2 x SD)
  • Mean – (2 x SD)
  • 95% of the data will lie within these limits if the data is normally
    distributed.
Example
Systolic BP in 1500 middle aged
men BP = 140mmHg
• Mean
• Standard Deviation = 20mmHg
• 95% Reference Range
  • Mean + (2 x 20) = 180mmHg
  • Mean – (2 x 20) = 100mmH
• Based on this sample, we expect 95% of men to have BP
  values between 100 and 180mmHg. This can be extended to
  say that we expect 95% of middle aged men in the population
  to have BP values between 100 – 180mmHg
Standard Error
• Imagine that samples of the same size ‘n’ are repeatedly taken
  from a defined population…and the mean BP of each sample
  is calculated.
• There will still be a spread of the means, even in the absence
  of bias because of sampling error or random variation.
• Standard error is simply a spread of sample means.
• Key features
Standard Error
• But instead of doing lots and lots of samples, we can
  determine the standard error using one sample.
• Standard Error = Standard Deviation / √n
• What do you think a small standard error means?
Confidence Intervals for a
mean
 • From: Mean – 2 x SE
 • To : Mean + 2 x SE

Take the following figures
Mean – 140mmHg
SE    - 0.5

140 – (2 x 0.5) = 139
140 + (2 x 0.5) = 141

95% CI = 139-141
Interpreting a Confidence
Interval
• In the population from which this sample came we estimate
  the mean BP to be 140mmHg and we are 95% sure that the
  true mean BP in the population is within the interval
  139mmHg – 141mmHg.
Key Points
• If looking at 95% Confidence Intervals from relative risks –
  check to see whether the range includes 1.
• If looking at 95% Confidence Intervals from differences in
  means – check to see whether the range includes 0.
95% Reference range and 95%
Confidence Interval
• 95% reference range tell us about the spread of data.
  • Therefore it is the spread of data which contains 95% of the
    observations
• 95% confidence intervals use standard error and tells us about
  the distribution of estimates (such as means)
  • Therefore it is a measure of the accuracy of sample estimate
Interpreting 95% CI Intervals
• Narrow CI  Precise estimate
• Wide CI  Imprecise estimate
• When looking at differences between means does 0 lie in the
  CI?
• When looking at relative risks does 1 lie in the CI?
P values
• Defined as “the probability that the result could have arisen by
  chance if there is no genuine association at all (null
  hypothesis)”
Example
• A randomized double blind clinical trial of propranolol vs
  placebo after a myocardial infarction reported the following
  results after 1 year of follow-up:-
• Relative risk of cardiac death in propranolol vs. placebo = 0.64
• 95%CI from 0.38 to 1.06
• P value = 0.12
We get more information from
confidence intervals.
• The value of the null hypotheses for relative risk is 1
• Does the 95% CI contain the null hypotheses value
  • Yes – it includes the value of 1
  • Therefore this study cannot conclude that propranalol reduces
    the risk of cardiac death compared to placebo
  • More data is needed.
Things you should go through
• Intelligence
  • Always comes up but you just need to learn the facts
• Lay Health Beliefs
  • Boring descriptive rubbish, so just read it and try and remember
    bits and pieces
Thanks
• Questions?

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ArabSoc IFP PPD Revision Lecture

  • 2. Professionalism • ‘Medical professionalism signifies a set of values, behaviours and relationship that underpins the trust the public has in doctors’ • The report further describes: • That medicine is a vocation in which doctors knowledge, clinical skills and judgement are put in the service of protecting and restoring human well-being.
  • 3. Professionalism • Composed of a doctor’s • Relationship with knowledge • Relationship with colleagues • Relationship with patients • Relationship with society • Relationship with self.
  • 4. Regulation of Professionalism • The GMC has two main functions: • It holds a list of all registered UK doctors • It acts as a professional regulator. • Why are medical students always threatened when we act like normal students? • Alcohol
  • 5. Good Medical Practice • Good clinical care • Maintaining Practice • Teaching and Training • Relationship with Patients • Working with colleagues • Probity • Health Great Minds Think Revising Will Probably Help
  • 6. Duties of a Health Care Professional • Moral duty – Respect patient autonomy • Professional duty - GMC • Legal duty - Law
  • 7. Ethical Practice • What is ethics? • Duty • Utility • Rights • Virtue • Ethical Principles • Moral Perception • Moral reasoning • Moral action
  • 8. Ethical Practice • Consent • This is the “volountary, un-coerced decision made by a sufficiently competent or autonomous person based on adequate information and deliberation, to accept rather than reject a proposed form of action”. • Validity judged on the Mental Capacity Act. • Mental Capacity Act (2005) • Primary purpose is to provide a legal framework for acting and making decisions on behalf of adults who lack capacity to make decisions for themselves. • Which situations do not require consent?
  • 9. Importance of Consent • Legal duty • Respect for patient autonomy (Ethical principle) • Respect Patient (Professionalism) • Establish relationship of trust with patient • Benefits patient • Co-operate • Jehova’s witness
  • 10. Ethics in children • Gillick competence • Brief History • “whether or not a child is capable of giving the necessary consent will depend on the child’s maturity and understanding and nature of consent required.” • Fraser Guidelines • They refer to the guidelines set out by Lord Fraser in his judgement of the Gillick case which apply specifically to contraceptive advice on the basis of a number of key principles.
  • 11. Competence • Four principles • Patient must understand information • Patient must retain information • Patient must weigh-up options • Patients must communicate decision.
  • 12. Memory and Conditioning • Memory process • Encoding • Storage • Retrieval • Atkinson-Shiffrin memory model • Sensory information • Short term memory • Long term memory
  • 14. Short Term Memory • This is basically what you are thinking about at any given moment. • Holds limited amount of information for short period of time – 20 to 30 seconds. • Capacity • 7 +/- 2 • Increased by chunking • Break large amount of information into meaningful information
  • 15. Long Term Memory • Unlimited capacity • Requires consolidation of information in short term memory • Involves long term potentiation • Can improve working memory…how? • Retrieval of information • Cues • Context • Level of processing • Organisation of information when learnt
  • 16. Types of Memory • Procedural memory • Form of memory that involves a sequence of movements or actions and enables us to perform various acts or skills. • Declarative memory • Episodic – form of memory that represents our knowledge of personally experienced events and the order they occurred. • Semantic – form of memory that represents our knowledge of words, symbols and concepts including meaning and rules for using them.
  • 17. Question • A patient comes in requiring bilateral removal of parts of the hippocampus. After the surgery, the patient can remember everything that occurred before the surgery and has a functioning working memory. However, he cannot learn anything new that has happened post-surgery but can still learn procedural skills without realising he has learnt them. • Which type of memory is affected? • Does this patient have amnesia? If so what type?
  • 18. Classical Conditioning • The combination of a neutral stimulus with a stimulus which does elicit a behavioural response. • The conditioned stimulus produces no response at first but after conditioning it elicits the conditioned response. • Pavlov’s experiment is a good example to use.
  • 19. Practical example • If you take an Arab and put a shawarma platter (unconditioned stimulus) in front of them, they will salivate (unconditioned response). • If you couple the shawarma (unconditioned stimulus) with a picture of LITTLE RAT (conditioned stimulus), over time, repeated exposure will cause the picture of the little rat ALONE to cause salivation.
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  • 21. Operant Conditioning • Form of learning in which an individual’s behaviour is modified by its consequences. • What is the difference between Operant and Classical conditioning? • Reinforcement and punishment are the core tools of operant conditioning, are either positive or negative. • Extinction
  • 22. Example • The bird in the box gets a seed when it speaks but when it moves and does not speak, the chute closes. • Therefore, the bird realises that in order to gain a seed it must speak. • This is positive reinforcement. • Extinction would be no longer giving the seed after the bird speaks
  • 23. Clinical Use • Cognitive Behavioural Therapy uses Operant conditioning • Targets emotional response to event and thus modifies behaviour. • Common exam question.
  • 24. Stress, Illness and Coping • Understanding the terms stressor, stress response and strain • Three theories • General Adaptation Syndrome • Life Events Model • Transactional model
  • 25. General Adaptation Syndrome • Alarm stage • Fight/flight reaction • Resistance stage • Defence / adaptation to stressor • Exhaustion • Failure to adapt to stressor The problems with this model?
  • 26. Life Events Model • This theory states that an accumulation of life events and continuous adjustments is detrimental to health. • This model measures stress by totalling number of life events within a period of time e.g. … • Problems?
  • 27. Transactional model • This model is based cognitive appraisal of the stressor. • The effect of the stressor is influenced by coping strategies • Stress results from an imbalance in demands versus resources • The perceived resources include factors such as personality traits, family support, experience. Problem – situations that occur without prior cognitive appraisal
  • 28. Models of Health and Disability • Biological model of disability • Social model of disability • Bio-psycho-social model of disability Impairment – loss of normal age-related structure and function of the body Disability – result of any social system which does not allow for inclusion of people with an impairment.
  • 29. Biological model of disability • Disease centred approach • Management of illness revolves around identifying the illness from a clinical perspective. • Then controlling it by medical intervention to cure the disease. • The biological model advocates an investment of health resources to cure disabilities with medical intervention. Problem with a purely biological approach?
  • 30. Social model of disability • Reaction to the dominant medical model of disability. • This model identifies systemic barriers, negative attitudes and exclusion by society that means society is the main contributory factor in disabling people. • Not everyone with an impairment has to be classed as disabled. • Difference between biological and social model? • Problems?
  • 31. Bio-Psycho-Social model • Health is best understood in terms of a combination of biological, psychological and social factors. • This looks at the biological, psychological and social effects. • Complex interaction between all three.
  • 32. Health Behaviour • Any behaviour which has an effect on health is known as a health behaviour. • This can be positive (exercise) or negative (smoking). • Three main theories that influence health behaviour • Health Belief Model • Theory of planned behaviour • Cognitive dissonance
  • 33. Health Belief Model • The model predicts that individuals will act to promote their health if they believe: • There is a perceived threat • The consequence and susceptibility to the threat is severe • Recommended actions to deal with the problem are beneficial • The benefits of taking action outweigh the barriers. Problem?
  • 34. Example • Application of the Health Belief Model to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS, individuals would be more likely to practice safe sex if they believed: • They are at risk of HIV infection • The consequences of HIV infection are severe • Safe sex practices are effective in reducing the risk of infection • The benefits of safe sex practice outweighs the potential barriers
  • 35. Theory of Planned Behaviour • Health behaviour depends on: • Attitudes • Individual evaluation of a behaviour • Subjective norms • How society or environment contributes to behaviour • Perceived behavioural control • The extent to which the individual believes he or she can control behaviour Problem?
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  • 38. Reducing dissonance • In order to reduce dissonance: • Change one or more beliefs • Eliminate a cognition • Introduce another cognition
  • 39. Loss, Bereavement and Grief • Loss – the physical loss of something. • Bereavement – the process we go through after we lose something to which we were emotionally attached. • Grief – the emotions associated with bereavement. • Mourning – psychological process resulting from loss and process of recovery.
  • 40. Emotions associated with grief • Acute Grief – agitation, crying and hallucinations • Long term – sleep disturbance, sleep withdrawal and depression
  • 41. Process of Mourning • Denial • Anger • Bargaining • Depression • Acceptance
  • 42. Pathological grief • Absent – failure to display symptoms of grief but may show severe signs on occasions • Prolonged – initially is normal grieving, but loss is still central after 6 months
  • 43. Morbidity associated with bereavement • Biological • ACTH / Cortisol levels rise • Lower lymphocyte proliferation • Lower cytotoxic T cells • Psycho/Social • Alcohol abuse • Neglect symptoms
  • 44. Common Mental Disorders • Mental illness – abnormal behaviour associated with reports of distressing experienecs. • Psychosis – an inability to distinguish fantasy from reality and is associated with delusions and hallucinations • Neurosis – is not a psychotic illness and is associated with anxiety and low mood.
  • 45. Biological Model • Dominated psychiatric profession in the last century. • Huge amounts of research has gone into this area of psychiatry. • Mental dysfunction is the result of a physical / chemical change in the brain. • This abnormal functioning in the brain should be treated as any other physiological illness.
  • 46. Psychodynamic model • Behaviour and feelings as adults are rooted in our childhood experiences • Relationships (particularly parenting) are of primary importance in determining how we feel and behave • Our behaviour and feelings are powerfully affected by the meaning of events to the unconscious mind • The symptoms shown are expression of unconscious thought and can indicate underlying problem
  • 47. Behavioural Model • Mental illness is associated with abnormal behaviour. • Behaviour is a result of the environment rather than genetics and so reject the view that abnormal behaviour has a biological basis. • Abnormal behaviour result from unhelpful learned responses.
  • 48. Example • A patient’s fear (phobia) of heights would be explained through the process of classical conditioning. Some time in the past, she would have learned to associate the emotion of fear with the stimulus of being in a high place through a chance association between the two stimuli. As a result, she would avoid heights, and therefore not have the opportunity to relearn the association in a more adaptive way. Treatment would involve desensitising the fear through conditioning techniques.
  • 49. Cognitive model • Mental illness is an error in thinking • View of the world is determined by our thinking. • Dysfunctional thinking  dysfunctional view of the world. • Therefore treatment targets necessary changes in thinking.
  • 50. Example • A patient suffering from a depressed mood after failing a driving test may be having negative thoughts not only about that specific failure but may be generalising those to other areas of her life. She may believe she is a failure in all aspects of her life and will never be successful again. These thoughts are irrational and polarised, and the therapist would strive to teach the patient ways of changing her thoughts. The therapist might also emphasise the importance of increasing positive reinforcements, and suggest ways in which this might be achieved.
  • 51. Advantages and Disadvantages of Classificaiton of Mental Illness • Advantages • It gives a diagnosis to the individual • It frames the problem and allows goal-directed activity from the individual to get better. • Disadvantages • People often want to blame something for their illness, who do you blame? • Labelling and stigma • Felt • Enacted
  • 53. Standard Deviation • Measure of spread of data • Used in normal distributions • Calculate variance • Standard Deviation is the square root of variance • Don’t need to know how to calculate but need to know what it means in simple terms…
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  • 55. Normal distribution • If data is normally distributed it will follow a Bell shape curve
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  • 57. What is a 95% Reference range • It is calculated • Mean + (2 x SD) • Mean – (2 x SD) • 95% of the data will lie within these limits if the data is normally distributed.
  • 58. Example Systolic BP in 1500 middle aged men BP = 140mmHg • Mean • Standard Deviation = 20mmHg • 95% Reference Range • Mean + (2 x 20) = 180mmHg • Mean – (2 x 20) = 100mmH • Based on this sample, we expect 95% of men to have BP values between 100 and 180mmHg. This can be extended to say that we expect 95% of middle aged men in the population to have BP values between 100 – 180mmHg
  • 59. Standard Error • Imagine that samples of the same size ‘n’ are repeatedly taken from a defined population…and the mean BP of each sample is calculated. • There will still be a spread of the means, even in the absence of bias because of sampling error or random variation. • Standard error is simply a spread of sample means. • Key features
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  • 61. Standard Error • But instead of doing lots and lots of samples, we can determine the standard error using one sample. • Standard Error = Standard Deviation / √n • What do you think a small standard error means?
  • 62. Confidence Intervals for a mean • From: Mean – 2 x SE • To : Mean + 2 x SE Take the following figures Mean – 140mmHg SE - 0.5 140 – (2 x 0.5) = 139 140 + (2 x 0.5) = 141 95% CI = 139-141
  • 63. Interpreting a Confidence Interval • In the population from which this sample came we estimate the mean BP to be 140mmHg and we are 95% sure that the true mean BP in the population is within the interval 139mmHg – 141mmHg.
  • 64. Key Points • If looking at 95% Confidence Intervals from relative risks – check to see whether the range includes 1. • If looking at 95% Confidence Intervals from differences in means – check to see whether the range includes 0.
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  • 66. 95% Reference range and 95% Confidence Interval • 95% reference range tell us about the spread of data. • Therefore it is the spread of data which contains 95% of the observations • 95% confidence intervals use standard error and tells us about the distribution of estimates (such as means) • Therefore it is a measure of the accuracy of sample estimate
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  • 68. Interpreting 95% CI Intervals • Narrow CI  Precise estimate • Wide CI  Imprecise estimate • When looking at differences between means does 0 lie in the CI? • When looking at relative risks does 1 lie in the CI?
  • 69. P values • Defined as “the probability that the result could have arisen by chance if there is no genuine association at all (null hypothesis)”
  • 70. Example • A randomized double blind clinical trial of propranolol vs placebo after a myocardial infarction reported the following results after 1 year of follow-up:- • Relative risk of cardiac death in propranolol vs. placebo = 0.64 • 95%CI from 0.38 to 1.06 • P value = 0.12
  • 71. We get more information from confidence intervals. • The value of the null hypotheses for relative risk is 1 • Does the 95% CI contain the null hypotheses value • Yes – it includes the value of 1 • Therefore this study cannot conclude that propranalol reduces the risk of cardiac death compared to placebo • More data is needed.
  • 72. Things you should go through • Intelligence • Always comes up but you just need to learn the facts • Lay Health Beliefs • Boring descriptive rubbish, so just read it and try and remember bits and pieces

Editor's Notes

  1. Attitude – so its an evaluation of the positive and negative of behaviours weighted by likeliness of conseequences coming aboutSubjective norms – belief about others opnions and motivations – if you think everyone will look badly on you, you may be more inclined to change your behaviourPerceived control – indivdiual belief on amount of contrl they have on their own behaviourThe main advantage of this theory is it allows us to distinguish health behaviours in different populations. For example, take smoking…Group A say that they don’t want to quit smoking because they believe the benefits of it as a stress relief is > the risk. Conversely, Group B, say they don’t want to quit smoking because they don’t believe they can i.e. they have low control.However, people do not always do what they intend, particularly with regards to habits or addiction. Also, the actual control is different to perceived control which results in failure to have behavioural change e.g. quit smoking and thus failure to seek help.
  2. This occurs when one holds two cognitive beliefs that are not psychologically compataible feeling of dissonance. For example as you can see above…
  3. Acute Grief – 6 weeksLong term – 3 – 12 months
  4. Neurotic patients candistinguish reality from fantasy.
  5. The underlying assumption of this model is that mental illnesses resemble physical illnesses and can therefore be diagnosed and treated in a similar way. Just as physical illnesses are caused by disease producing germs, genetic factors, biochemical imbalances or changes to the nervous system, it is assumed that this is also true of mental illnesses. Because it assumes that mental disorders arise from such physical causes, the medical model is therefore a biological model.
  6. This model is interested in how childhood relationships and experiences affect future mental health. The core assumption of this approach is that the roots of mental disorders are psychological. They lie in the unconscious mind and are the result of failure of defence mechanisms to protect the self.
  7. Behaviourists have a similar view to Psychodynamic model in that they believe that our actions are largely determined by our experiences in life. However, unlike the Psychodynamic model, they see abnormal behaviour as a learned respnse (through conditioning) and not as a result of an unconscious process. They argue that maladaptive learning can be treated by changing the environment so that un-learning can take place.
  8. From this theory we have gained uses of a number of behavioural therapies which have a high success rate. However, opponents to this theory argue that the model provides a limited view of the causes of mental illness and does not explain the evidence relating to genetic predispositions to mental illness.
  9. This is an outgrowth and a reaciton to the behaviourist approach. The basic assumption of the cognitive approach is that it understands mental disorder as a being the reuslt of an error in thinking. Our view of the world is determined by our thinking, and dysfunctional thinking can lead to mental disorder. This model will be familiar to anyone who has trained or undergone cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT).  CBT aims to identify and correct ‘errors’ in thinking.  In this way, unlike psychodynamic therapy, it takes little interest in a patient’s past.
  10. If data is normally distrbuted it means that 65% of all measurements fall within 1 Standard Deviation of the mean and 95% of all measurements fall within 2 standard deviations of the mean. This is called the 95% central reference range.
  11. Small SE  narrow spread  all sample means close to the true meanLarge SE  wide spread  some sample means are far from the true mean.Therefore standard error is a measure of precision for the sample mean.
  12. Therefore if it is a measure of the accuracy of sample estimate is a narrow or wide CI more precise?
  13. If 0 lies in it – not statistical signifncaIf 1 lies in it – not statsitical significant