* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download No Slide Title - People Server at UNCW
Spectrum disorder wikipedia , lookup
Mental disorder wikipedia , lookup
Child psychopathology wikipedia , lookup
Mental health professional wikipedia , lookup
Moral treatment wikipedia , lookup
Asperger syndrome wikipedia , lookup
International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems wikipedia , lookup
Dissociative identity disorder wikipedia , lookup
Pyotr Gannushkin wikipedia , lookup
Mental status examination wikipedia , lookup
Causes of mental disorders wikipedia , lookup
History of psychiatry wikipedia , lookup
Controversy surrounding psychiatry wikipedia , lookup
History of mental disorders wikipedia , lookup
Abnormal psychology wikipedia , lookup
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders wikipedia , lookup
Chapter 3 Clinical Assessment and Diagnosis Assessing Psychological Disorders  Purposes of Clinical Assessment  To understand the individual  To predict behavior  To plan treatment  To evaluate treatment outcome  Analogous to a Funnel  Starts broad  Multidimensional in approach  Narrow to specific problem areas Three Concepts Determine the Value of Assessment Three Concepts Determine the Value of Assessment  Reliability  Examples include test-retest, inter-rater reliability  Validity  Examples include content, concurrent, discriminant, construct, and face validity  Standardization and Norms  Examples include administration procedures, scoring, and evaluation of data Domains of Assessment: The Clinical Interview and Physical Exam  Physical Exam – Referral to physician  Rule out medical conditions  Clinical Interview  Most common clinical assessment method  Structured or semi-structured  Mental Status Exam  Appearance and behavior  Thought processes  Mood and affect  Intellectual functioning  Sensorium Mental Status Exam Domains of Assessment: Behavioral Assessment and Observation  Behavioral Assessment  Focus on here and now  Tends to be direct and minimally inferential  Target behaviors are identified and observed  Focus on antecedents, behaviors, and consequences  Behavioral Observation and Behavioral Assessment  Can be either formal or informal  Self-monitoring vs. others observing  Problem of reactivity using direct observation Domains of Assessment: Behavioral Assessment and Observation Domains of Assessment: Psychological Testing and Projective Tests  Psychological Testing  Must be reliable and valid  Projective Tests  Project aspects of personality onto ambiguous stimuli  Roots in psychoanalytic tradition  High degree of inference in scoring and interpretation  Examples include the Rorschach Inkblot Test, Thematic Apperception Test  Reliability and validity data tend to be mixed Rorschach Test Thematic Apperception Test Domains of Assessment: Psychological Testing and Objective Tests  Objective Tests  Test stimuli are minimally ambiguous  Roots in empirical tradition  Require minimal inference in scoring and interpretation  Objective Personality Tests  Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI, MMPI2, MMPI-A)  Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory  Objective Intelligence Tests  WAIS/WISC – Performance and Verbal Scales  Stanford-Binet – Mental Age/Age = IQ  Raven Progressive Matrices Test – Non-verbal Domains of Assessment: Psychological Testing and Neuropsychology  Neuropsychological Tests  Assess broad range of skills and abilities  Goal is to understand brain-behavior relations  Used to evaluate a person’s assets and deficits  Examples include the Luria-Nebraska and Halstead-Reitan Batteries  Overlap with intelligence tests Domains of Assessment: Neuroimaging and Brain Structure  Neuroimaging: Pictures of the Brain  Allows examination of brain structure and function  Imaging Brain Structure  Computerized axial tomography (CAT or CT scan)  CAT utilizes X-rays of brain; pictures in slices  Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)  MRI has better resolution than CAT scan  MRI operates via strong magnetic field around head Domains of Assessment: Neuroimaging and Brain Function (cont.)  Imaging Brain Function  Positron emission tomography (PET)  Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT)  Both involve injection of radioactive isotopes  React with oxygen, blood, and glucose in the brain  Functional MRI (fMRI) – Brief changes in brain activity  Used mainly in research Diagnosing Psychological Disorders: Foundations in Classification  Clinical Assessment vs. Psychiatric Diagnosis  Assessment – Idiographic approach  Diagnosis – Nomothetic approach  Both are important in treatment planning and intervention  Diagnostic Classification  Classification is central to all sciences  Develop categories based on shared attributes  Terminology of Classification Systems  Taxonomy – Classification in a scientific context  Nosology – Taxonomy in psychological / medical contexts  Nomenclature – Nosological labels (e.g., panic disorder) Diagnosing and Classifying Psychological Disorders  The Nature and Forms of Classification Systems  Classical (or pure) categorical approach – Categories  Dimensional approach – Classification along dimensions  Prototypical approach – Both classical and dimensional  Two Widely Used Classification Systems  International Classification of Diseases and Health Related Problems (ICD-10); published by the World Health Organization  Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM); published by the American Psychiatric Association; currently the DSM-IV and DSM-IV-TR Purposes and Evolution of the DSM  Purposes of the DSM System  Aid communication  Evaluate prognosis and need for treatment  Treatment planning  DSM-I (1952) and DSM-II (1968)  Both relied on unproven theories and were unreliable  DSM-III (1980) and DSM-III-R  Were atheoretical, emphasizing clinical description  Multiaxial system with detailed criterion sets for disorders  Problems included low reliability, and reliance on committee consensus The DSM-IV  Basic Characteristics  Five axes describing full clinical presentation  Clear inclusion and exclusion criteria for disorders  Disorders are categorized under broad headings  Empircally grounded prototypic approach to classification  The Five DSM-IV Axes  Axis I – Most major disorders  Axis II – Stable, enduring problems (e.g., personality disorders, mental retardation)  Axis III – Medical conditions related to abnormal behavior  Axis IV – Psychosocial problems  Axis V – Global clinician rating of adaptive functioning  Other Unique Features of the DSM-IV Unresolved Issues in the DSM-IV  What Are the Optimal Thresholds for Diagnosis?  Examples include level or distress, impairment, number of required symptoms  Arbitrary Time Periods in the Definitions of Diagnoses  Should Other Axes Be Included?  Examples include premorbid history, treatment response, family functioning  Is the DSM-IV System Optimal for Treatment or Research?  The Problem of Comorbidity  Defined as two or more disorders for the same person  High comorbidity is the rule clinically  Comorbidity threatens the validity of separate diagnoses Summary of Clinical Assessment and Diagnosis  Clinical Assessment and Diagnosis  To provide a complete picture of the client  To aid understanding and ameliorating human suffering  Require reliable, valid, and standardized information  Dangers of Diagnosis  Problem of reification  Problem of stigmatization  Assessment and Diagnosis  The core of abnormal psychology  Requires a multidimensional perspective
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            