* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Somatoform Disorders and Dissociative Disorders
Test anxiety wikipedia , lookup
Selective mutism wikipedia , lookup
Bipolar II disorder wikipedia , lookup
Obsessive–compulsive disorder wikipedia , lookup
Impulsivity wikipedia , lookup
Symptoms of victimization wikipedia , lookup
Gender dysphoria wikipedia , lookup
Broken windows theory wikipedia , lookup
Addictive personality wikipedia , lookup
Rumination syndrome wikipedia , lookup
Factitious disorder imposed on another wikipedia , lookup
Memory disorder wikipedia , lookup
Obsessive–compulsive personality disorder wikipedia , lookup
Gender dysphoria in children wikipedia , lookup
Bipolar disorder wikipedia , lookup
Substance use disorder wikipedia , lookup
Eating disorders and memory wikipedia , lookup
Autism spectrum wikipedia , lookup
Death anxiety (psychology) wikipedia , lookup
Panic disorder wikipedia , lookup
Social anxiety disorder wikipedia , lookup
Schizoaffective disorder wikipedia , lookup
Anxiety disorder wikipedia , lookup
Eating disorder wikipedia , lookup
Personality disorder wikipedia , lookup
Psychological trauma wikipedia , lookup
Mental disorder wikipedia , lookup
Depression in childhood and adolescence wikipedia , lookup
Glossary of psychiatry wikipedia , lookup
Asperger syndrome wikipedia , lookup
Conduct disorder wikipedia , lookup
Antisocial personality disorder wikipedia , lookup
Munchausen by Internet wikipedia , lookup
Depersonalization disorder wikipedia , lookup
Diagnosis of Asperger syndrome wikipedia , lookup
Causes of mental disorders wikipedia , lookup
Separation anxiety disorder wikipedia , lookup
Spectrum disorder wikipedia , lookup
Generalized anxiety disorder wikipedia , lookup
Conversion disorder wikipedia , lookup
Child psychopathology wikipedia , lookup
History of mental disorders wikipedia , lookup
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders wikipedia , lookup
Narcissistic personality disorder wikipedia , lookup
Somatoform Disorders and Dissociative Disorders Ellen becomes dizzy & nauseated in the late afternoon- shortly before she expects her husband home. Neither her primary care physician nor the neurologist he sent her to could identify a physical cause. They suspect her symptoms have an unconscious psychological origin, possibly triggered by her mixed feelings about her husband. Somatoform Disorders Somatoform Disorders: psychological disorder in which the symptoms take a somatic (bodily) form without apparent physical causes Culture has a big effect on people’s physical complaints Psychological explanations of anxiety and depression are socially less acceptable in China than in Western Culture Chinese appear more willing to report physical symptoms of their distress Bodily complaints have often been observed in African cultures as well. One type of somatoform disorder is conversion disorder A rare somatoform disorder in which a person experiences very specific genuine physical symptoms for which no physiological basis can be found Anxiety is converted into a physical symptom Hypochondriasis is another form of somatoform disorders A person interprets normal physical sensations as symptoms of a disease Typically the person will go through many doctors before one will diagnosis them Many times the person, and doctors, fail to treat the psychological roots of the disorder and only treat the physical complaints Dissociative Disorders Dissociative Disorders: disorders in which conscious awareness becomes separated (dissociated) from previous memories, thoughts, and feelings Dissociation itself is not so rare Many people may have a sense of being unreal, of being separated from their body Example of this is when you drive somewhere without consciously knowing that you were driving Dissociative Identity Disorder A rare dissociative disorder in which a person exhibits two or more distinct personalities. Used to be called multiple personality disorder Each personality has its own identity Understanding Dissociative Identity Disorder Nicholas Spanos asked college students to pretend they were accused murders being examined by a psychiatrist Under hypnosis most spontaneously expressed a second personality Skeptics also find it suspicious that the disorder is so localized in time and space Between 1930 and 1960 only 2 cases per decade were diagnosis In 1980 when the DSM contained the first formal code the number shot up to 20,000 Outside of North America disorder is much less prevalent o In India and Japan it is practically nonexistent Is this a cultural phenomenon? Skeptics feel some practitioners that use hypnosis go fishing for personalities Other psychologists disagree finding support of DID Handedness switches from personality to personality Visual acuity and eye muscle balance changes Both psychoanalysis and learning perspectives agree that this is a way of handling anxiety Psychoanalysis see this as a defense against the anxiety cause by the eruption of unacceptable impulses Learning view this as behavior reinforced by anxiety reduction Some place dissociative disorders under posttraumatic disorders because of their natural protective responses There’s Something About Eve Chris Sizemore’s story gave visibility to DID