This document provides an overview of psychological disorders and their treatment. It discusses what constitutes abnormal behavior and outlines several approaches to understanding the etiology of psychological disorders, including the biological, psychological, and sociocultural approaches. It then describes several major categories of psychological disorders like mood disorders, anxiety disorders, dissociative disorders, eating disorders, and schizophrenia. For each disorder, it provides details on symptoms, causes, and common treatments. It also discusses different classification systems for psychological disorders and criticisms of these systems.
Aversion Therapy-Definitions,Uses Of Aversion Therapy,Types Of Stimuli Used In Aversion Therapy,Electrical Shocks,Advantages Of Using Electrical Shocks
Aversion Therapy-Definitions,Uses Of Aversion Therapy,Types Of Stimuli Used In Aversion Therapy,Electrical Shocks,Advantages Of Using Electrical Shocks
Family therapy is a family oriented psychotherapy that is aomed at resolving the conflicts and poor communication pattern among the family members. It also aid them in learning coping strategies to deal with distress and deal with the stress related to psychiatric illness of the family member.
Basics fundamentals and assumptions of CBT. Based on the assumption that thoughts, emotions and behaviour are inter related and affect each other.
Sources: Cognitive Therapy: Basics and Beyond
Book by Judith S. Beck
Cognitive Behaviour Therapy: 100 Key Points and Techniques by Michael Neenan & Windy Dryden
Play therapy is a method of meeting and responding to the mental health needs of children and is extensively acknowledged by experts as an effective and suitable intervention in dealing with children’s brain development.
This is an introductory set of slides about Treatment of Schizophrenia. It aims to create awareness about treatment methods available for caring individuals with schizophrenia.
Recreational therapy
Recreational therapy also known as therapeutic recreation, is a systematic process that utilizes recreation and other activity-based interventions to address the assessed needs of individuals with illnesses and/or disabling conditions, as a means to psychological and physical health, recovery and well-being
Recreation:
A form of voluntary activities that is carried on in the leisure time, usually for pleasure but also to satisfy other personal needs and drives
THERE ARE TWO TYPES OF RECREATION:
1. Active Recreation:
involves playing fields and team participation such as baseball, soccer e.t.c.
2. Passive Recreation:
Recreation without fields, more generally trial based hiking, mountain biking, hoarse riding, wild life viwing e.t.c.
FORMS OF RECREATIONAL ACTIVITIES
1. Motor Form
these are devided into:
fundamental(games such as hockey and football)
Accessory forms(play activity and dancing)
2. Sensory Form
These can be either visual (looking at motion pictures, play e.t.c or auditory(listening to a concert)
3. Intellectual Form
Activities involving the use of mind and intellectual functions(reading, debating)
AIMS OF RECEATION THERAPY INCLUDE:
To improve or mantain physical , mental, cognitive , social, emotional and spiritual functioning in order to facilitate full participation in life
To reduce disability.
To improve quality of life.
STEPS OF RECREATION THERAPY:
Assessment: working with clients to identify health status, needs and strengths to provide data for interventions.
Planning: priorities are set; goals are formulated; objectives are developed; programmes, strategies, and approaches are specified; and means of evaluation are determined.
Intervention: the action phase of the TR process. Involves the actual execution of the programme plan by the TR specialist and client.
Evaluation: The goals and objectives are appraised. The primary question: How did the client respond to the planned intervention?
Family therapy is a family oriented psychotherapy that is aomed at resolving the conflicts and poor communication pattern among the family members. It also aid them in learning coping strategies to deal with distress and deal with the stress related to psychiatric illness of the family member.
Basics fundamentals and assumptions of CBT. Based on the assumption that thoughts, emotions and behaviour are inter related and affect each other.
Sources: Cognitive Therapy: Basics and Beyond
Book by Judith S. Beck
Cognitive Behaviour Therapy: 100 Key Points and Techniques by Michael Neenan & Windy Dryden
Play therapy is a method of meeting and responding to the mental health needs of children and is extensively acknowledged by experts as an effective and suitable intervention in dealing with children’s brain development.
This is an introductory set of slides about Treatment of Schizophrenia. It aims to create awareness about treatment methods available for caring individuals with schizophrenia.
Recreational therapy
Recreational therapy also known as therapeutic recreation, is a systematic process that utilizes recreation and other activity-based interventions to address the assessed needs of individuals with illnesses and/or disabling conditions, as a means to psychological and physical health, recovery and well-being
Recreation:
A form of voluntary activities that is carried on in the leisure time, usually for pleasure but also to satisfy other personal needs and drives
THERE ARE TWO TYPES OF RECREATION:
1. Active Recreation:
involves playing fields and team participation such as baseball, soccer e.t.c.
2. Passive Recreation:
Recreation without fields, more generally trial based hiking, mountain biking, hoarse riding, wild life viwing e.t.c.
FORMS OF RECREATIONAL ACTIVITIES
1. Motor Form
these are devided into:
fundamental(games such as hockey and football)
Accessory forms(play activity and dancing)
2. Sensory Form
These can be either visual (looking at motion pictures, play e.t.c or auditory(listening to a concert)
3. Intellectual Form
Activities involving the use of mind and intellectual functions(reading, debating)
AIMS OF RECEATION THERAPY INCLUDE:
To improve or mantain physical , mental, cognitive , social, emotional and spiritual functioning in order to facilitate full participation in life
To reduce disability.
To improve quality of life.
STEPS OF RECREATION THERAPY:
Assessment: working with clients to identify health status, needs and strengths to provide data for interventions.
Planning: priorities are set; goals are formulated; objectives are developed; programmes, strategies, and approaches are specified; and means of evaluation are determined.
Intervention: the action phase of the TR process. Involves the actual execution of the programme plan by the TR specialist and client.
Evaluation: The goals and objectives are appraised. The primary question: How did the client respond to the planned intervention?
This a project for a high school AP Psychology course. This is a fictionalized account of having a psychological ailment. For questions about this blog project or its content please email the teacher, Laura Astorian: laura.astorian@cobbk12.org
mood disorders presentation is focused on mania, its definition, ICD -10 classification, stages of mania, its clinical features, etiology, medical management and nursing management.
Maintaining a positive mental health and treating any mental health conditions is crucial to stabilizing constructive behaviors, emotions, and thoughts. Focusing on mental health care can increase productivity, enhance our self-image, and improve relationships.
Do you want to know more about Mental Illnesses/disorders? Then click this link and learn more about these topics!
(Kindly react "❤️" to this post, for educational purposes only, thank you!)
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
This presentation provides a briefing on how to upload submissions and documents in Google Classroom. It was prepared as part of an orientation for new Sainik School in-service teacher trainees. As a training officer, my goal is to ensure that you are comfortable and proficient with this essential tool for managing assignments and fostering student engagement.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
Francesca Gottschalk - How can education support child empowerment.pptxEduSkills OECD
Francesca Gottschalk from the OECD’s Centre for Educational Research and Innovation presents at the Ask an Expert Webinar: How can education support child empowerment?
Palestine last event orientationfvgnh .pptxRaedMohamed3
An EFL lesson about the current events in Palestine. It is intended to be for intermediate students who wish to increase their listening skills through a short lesson in power point.
1. CHAPTER 12 AND 13:
PSYCHOLOGICAL
DISORDERS AND TREATMENT
JSRCC
PSY 200 15 pr
2. ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY
• What is Abnormal?
• Deviating from the normal or average
• The study of behavior patterns that diverge widely from generally accepted norms
• Abnormal behavior is deviant, maladaptive, or personally distressful over a relatively
long period of time
• Deviant, Maladaptive, Distressful
• Deviant
• Abnormal behavior is certainly atypical or statistically unusual
• Deviant behavior in one culture may be considered normal, while in others it may
lead to arrest
• Unusual and not expectable in culture
• Maladaptive
• interferes with one's ability to function effectively in the world
• not helpful at all and keeps people from forming normal functions
• Distressful
• person engaging in the behavior finds it troubling
• happens over a long period of time
3. ETIOLOGY OF PSYCHOLOGICAL
DISORDERS
• The Biological Approach
• attributes psychological disorders to organic, internal causes
• disorders with biological origins
• Psychopharmacology
• The science of determining which drugs alleviate which mental disorders and why
they do so
• The use of drugs to control or relieve the symptoms of psychological disorders
• Psychiatrist v. Psychologist
• Psychiatrist
• Can prescript medicine
• Mn.D.
• Psychologist
• Ph.D.
4. PSYCHOLOGICAL APPROACH
• emphasizes the contributions of experiences, thoughts, emotions, and
personality characteristics in explaining psychological disorders
• experiences, thoughts, emotions, personality
5. Insight v. Action
Therapies
• Insight therapies
• Psychotherapies in which the main goal is helping people to gain insight with
respect to their behavior, thoughts, and feelings
• Action therapies
• Psychotherapy in which the main goal is to change disordered or inappropriate
behavior directly
6. PSYCHOANALYSIS
• Freud’s therapeutic technique for analyzing an individual’s unconscious
thoughts
• An insight therapy bade on the theory of Freud, emphasizing the revealing of
unconscious conflicts
7. SOCIOCULTURAL APPROACH
• Social context
• Emphasizes the social contexts in which a person lives, including gender, ethnicity,
socioeconomic status, family relationships, and culture.
• Group Therapy, Support Groups, Family Therapy, Community Mental Health
• Group therapy
• Group people with same problem together
• Family therapy
• More dynamic issue
• Community Mental Health
• Cost less
• Easy to access
8. • Biopsychosocial Model
• Interaction of biological, psychological and sociocultural factors
• Assumes that biological, sociocultural, and psychological factors combine and
interact to produce psychological disorders
• Integrative Therapy/Eclectic Approach
• Eclectic approach
• Need to change behavior in or to prove one self
• Integrative therapy
• Prove understanding of one’s self to prove
9. CLASSIFYING ABNORMAL
BEHAVIOR (PROS AND CONS)
• DSM-5
• The diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorder, fifth edition; the major
of psychological disorders in the United States
10. AXIS I V. AXIS II
• Axis 1
• Primary diagnosis including patients primary clinical symptoms present at the
time
• Panic disorder
• Axis 2
• Reflect longstanding personality disorders or retardation
• Dependent personality disorder
11. Other Axes
• Axis 3
• Notes any medical conditions that might be relevant (ex: high blood pressure,
concussion..)
• high blood pressure, hypertension
• Axis 4
• Rates intensity of psychosocial or environmental problems of patient’s life
• Severe stressors; divorce, job loss
• Axis 5
• Patient’s coping resources/adaptive functioning
• Serious symptoms; fair overall functioning
12. CRITIQUES OF THE DSM
• Criticisms
• It relies too much on social norms and subjective judgments.
• Too many new categories of disorders have been added, some of which do not
yet have consistent research support and whose inclusion will lead to a
significant increase in the number of people being labeled as having a mental
disorder.
• Loosened standards for some existing diagnoses will add to the already very high
rates of these.
13. ANXIETY DISORDERS
• Anxiety Disorders
• Involve fears that are uncontrollable, disproportionate to the actual danger the
person might be in, and disruptive of ordinary life.
• Generalized Anxiety Disorder
• is different from such everyday feelings of anxiety in that sufferers experience
persistent anxiety for at least 6 months and are unable to specify the reasons for
the anxiety
• Treatment
•
•
•
•
cognitive behavioral therapy
exposure therapy
medication
buspar
14. PANIC DISORDER/AGORAPHOBIA
• Panic Disorder/Agoraphobia
• Anxiety disorder in which the individual experiences recurrent, sudden onsets of
intense apprehension or terror, often without warning an with no specific cause
• Panic attacks can produce severe palpitations, extreme shortness of breath,
chest pains, trembling, sweating, dizziness, and a feeling of helplessness
• Treatment
• Benzodiazepines
• xanax
15. PHOBIC DISORDER
• Phobia
• Irrational, involuntary, and inappropriate fears of ordinary situations or things
• Systematic Desensitization
• Behavior therapy that treats anxiety by teaching the client to associate deep
relaxation with increasingly intense anxiety producing situations
• Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
• Anxiety disorder in which the individual has anxiety-provoking thoughts that will
not go away and/or urges to perform repetitive,, ritualistic behaviors to prevent
or produce some future situation
• Is an anxiety disorder and is characterized by recurrent, unwanted thought
and/or repetitive behaviors
16. • PTSD
• Post-traumatic stress disorder
• Anxiety disorder that develops through exposure to a traumatic event. A
severely oppressive situation, cruel abuse, or a natural or unnatural disaster
• An anxiety disorder that can occur after someone experiences a traumatic
event that caused intense fear, helplessness, or horror
17. MOOD DISORDERS
• Mood Disorders
• According to the National Mental Health Information Center, each year some
44 million Americans experience a mental disorder.
• One of the most prevalent, Depression, will greatly impact many college students.
• Causes:
• Biological Factors
• Psychological Factors
• Social Factors
• Symptoms Include:
• Lack of Interest & Trouble Concentrating
• Overwhelming Sadness
• Feelings of Guilt or Worthlessness
18. BIPOLAR DISORDER
• is a disorder characterized by extreme mood swings that include one or
more episodes of mania, an overexcited, unrealistically optimistic state
• Mood cycles of mania and/or depression and normalcy and other
symptoms
19. EATING DISORDERS
• Anorexia nervosa
• is an eating disorder that involves the relentless pursuit of thinness through
starvation.
• Bulimia nervosa
• is an eating disorder in which an individual (typically female) consistently follows
a binge-and-purge eating pattern
• Binge-eating disorder (BED)
• is characterized by recurrent episodes of consuming large amounts of food
during which the person feels a lack of control over eating
20. DISSOCIATIVE DISORDERS
• Dissociative Disorders
• are psychological disorders that involve a sudden loss of memory or change in
identity
• Dissociative disorders occur in which an aspect of the person’s personality is
separate from the rest, like dissociative Amnesia
• Dissociative Amnesia
• is a type of amnesia characterized by extreme memory loss that stems from
extensive psychological stress.
• Characterized by a loss of memory with no organic cause
21. SCHIZOPHRENIA
• Schizophrenia
• is a severe psychological disorder that is characterized by highly disordered
thought processes
• usually diagnosed in early adulthood, around age 18 for men and 25 for women
• Psychosis
• refers to a state in which a person's perceptions and thoughts are fundamentally
removed from reality
• Positive Symptoms
• Positive symptoms are the abnormal behaviors that are present in people with
schizophrenia
• Hallucinations, Delusions, Disorganized Speech, Disorganized Behaviors,
Inappropriate Affect
22. EATING DISORDERS
• Anorexia nervosa
• is an eating disorder that involves the relentless pursuit of thinness through
starvation.
• Bulimia nervosa
• is an eating disorder in which an individual (typically female) consistently follows
a binge-and-purge eating pattern
• Binge-eating disorder (BED)
• is characterized by recurrent episodes of consuming large amounts of food
during which the person feels a lack of control over eating
23. DISSOCIATIVE DISORDERS
• are psychological disorders that involve a sudden loss of memory or change
in identity
• Dissociative disorders occur in which an aspect of the person’s personality is
separate from the rest, like dissociative Amnesia
24. DISSOCIATIVE AMNESIA
• is a type of amnesia characterized by extreme memory loss that stems from
extensive psychological stress.
• Characterized by a loss of memory with no organic cause
• Dissociative amnesia entails memory loss caused by extensive psychological
stress.
25. • Dissociative Fugue
• Dissociative fugue also involves memory loss, but individuals with this disorder
unexpectedly travel away from home or work, sometimes assume a new
identity, and do not remember the old one
• Dissociative Identity Disorder
• formerly called multiple personality disorder, is the most dramatic, least common,
and most controversial dissociative disorder
• dissociative identity disorder, formerly called multiple personality disorder, two or
more distinct personalities are present in the same individual.
26. SCHIZOPHRENIA
• Schizophrenia
• is a severe psychological disorder that is characterized by highly disordered
thought processes
• usually diagnosed in early adulthood, around age 18 for men and 25 for women
• Psychosis
• refers to a state in which a person's perceptions and thoughts are
fundamentally removed from reality
• Positive Symptoms
• Positive symptoms are the abnormal behaviors that are present in people with
schizophrenia
27. • Hallucinations
• are sensory experiences that occur in the absence of real stimuli
• are usually auditory—the person might complain of hearing voices—or visual, and
much less commonly they can be experienced as smells or tastes
• sensory perception in the absence of any external sensory stimulus; an imaginary
sensation
• sensory experiences without sensory stimulation
• Delusions
• are false, unusual, and sometimes magical beliefs that are not part of an individual's
culture.
• False belief, not generally shared by others in the culture, that cannot be changed
despite strong evidence to contrary
• False beliefs, often or persecution or grandeur, that may accompany psychotic
disorders
28. • Personality Disorders
• are chronic, maladaptive cognitive-behavioral patterns that are thoroughly
integrated into an individual's personality. Personality disorders are relatively
common
• Antisocial
• Disorder characterized by guiltlessness, law-breaking, exploitation of others,
irresponsibility, and deceit
• Psychopaths
• is sometimes used to refer to a subgroup of individuals with ASPD
• Psychopaths tend to show less prefrontal activation than normal individuals and
to have structural abnormalities in the amygdala, as well as the hippocampus,
the brain structure most closely associated with memory
29. BORDERLINE
• Disorder characterized by a pervasive pattern of instability in interpersonal
relationships, self-image, and emotions, and of marked impulsivity beginning
by early adulthood and present in a variety of contests
30. QUESTION AND ANSWER
• Anorexia nervosa is to starvation, whereas, bulimia nervosa is to purging.
• Cultural norms provide guidance about how people should behave and
what behavior is healthy.
• The biopsychosocial perspective involves factors such as interactions
between other perspectives.
• Bulimia nervosa sufferers binge-purge, and in some cases, employ the use of
laxatives.
• Abnormal behavior can be defined in many ways, some of which are:
• Behavior that is distressful
• Behavior that is deviant
• Behavior that is maladaptive
31. • Binge eating disorder is characterized by recurrent patterns of eating large
amounts of food during which a person feels a lack of control.
• Culture establishes the norms by which people evaluate their own behaviors.
• Thinking about suicide is not necessarily abnormal, however, attempting or
completing the act of suicide is abnormal.
• People with generalized anxiety disorder worry about work, health and
relationships, but also about little things such as whether their clothes fit just
right.
• Social anxiety disorder or social phobia is an intense fear of being humiliated
in a social situations.
32. • The acronym ECT stands for electroconvulsive therapy.
• Neuroleptics are drugs that block the action of the:
• Dopamine system
• The concept of self-efficacy can be useful in therapy when people needed:
• To boister their confidence
• In group therapy several unrelated people meet with a therapist to discuss
some aspect of their psychological function.
• Family therapists meet with the members so that they can speak freely for
the therapist to see how they interact.
33. • Neuroleptics are the most widely used class antipsychotic drugs.
• Antidepressant drugs are a class of medication used to treat depression and
improve the moods of the patients.