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ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY (PAPER II) VI SEMESTER CORE COURSE B Sc COUNSELING PSYCHOLOGY (2011 Admission) UNIVERSITY OF CALICUT SCHOOL OF DISTANCE EDUCATION Calicut university P.O, Malappuram Kerala, India 673 635. School of Distance Education UNIVERSITY OF CALICUT SCHOOL OF DISTANCE EDUCATION STUDY MATERIAL Core Course B Sc COUNSELLING PSYCHOLOGY VI Semester ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY (PAPER II) Prepared by: Smt. Nisha. K, Asst. Professor, Dept. of Psychology, University of Calicut. Scrutinized by: Dr. C. Jayan, Professor, Dept. of Psychology, University of Calicut. Layout: Computer Section, SDE © Reserved Abnormal Psychology 2 School of Distance Education MODULE CONTENTS PAGE No I OTHER BEHAVIOR DISORDERS 4 II ASSESSMENT 27 Abnormal Psychology 3 School of Distance Education MODULE 1 OTHER BEHAVIOR DISORDERS The schizophrenia and delusional disorder Introduction Belgian Psychiatrist described the case of schizophrenia in1860.He used the term' Demence Precoce'.The Latin form of this term -dementia Precox-was adopted by theGerman psychiatrist Emil kraeplin in late 19th century to refer to a group of conditions that all seemed to have the features of mental deterioration beginning early in the life. The term schizophrenia was used bythe Swiss Psyhiatrist Eugen Bleuler in 1911, it means split mind. Clinical picture of schizophrenia There are two general symptom patterns or syndrome of schizophrenia1]Positive and 2] Negative syndrome schizophrenia. • Positive sign or syndrome: These syndromes are those in which something has been added to a normal repertoire of behavior and experience. It also known as type I schizophrenia.The symtoms are hallucination, delusion, derailment of association, bizarre behavior, minimal cognitive impairment, sudden onset, and variable course. The above symptoms plus good response to drugs, limbic system abnormalities and normal brain ventricle are also present. • Negative signs or syndrome refers to an absence of or deficit of behaviors normally present in an individual's repertoire.It is also known as Type II schizophrenia.The symptoms are • Emotional flattening • Poverty of speech • Lack of sociability • Apathy • Significant Cognitive impairment Abnormal Psychology 4 School of Distance Education • Insidious onset • Chronic course The above symptoms plus uncertain respond to drug, frontal low abnormalities, and Enlarged brain ventricle are the features present in negative syndrome. Major symptoms of schizophrenia. 1. Disturbance of associative linking Often referred to as formal thought disorder. Associative disturbance is usually considered as prime indicative of a schizophrenic disorder. Basically, an affected person fails to make sense despite seeming to confirm to the semantic and syntactic rules governing verbal communication 2. Disturbance of thought content Typically involve certain standard types of delusion or false belief. Prominent among these are beliefs that one’s thought, feelings or actions are being controlled by external agents, that one’s private thoughts are being broadcast indiscriminately to others and that thoughts are being inserted into one's brain by alien forces etc 3. Disruption of perception Unable to sort out and process the great mass of sensory information to which all of us are constantly exposed. Hallucination (false perception) such as voices that only the schizophrenic person can hear. Auditory hallucinations are often seen, also visual and olfactory hallucination. 4. Emotional dysfunction. This include the following features 1. Inappropriate emotions 2. Anhedonia-inability to, experience joy or pleasure 3. Emotional shallowness or blunting, lack of intensity or clear definition 4. May appear emotionless 5. Confused sense of self 1. May feel confused about their identity to the point of loss of subjective sense of self Abnormal Psychology 5 School of Distance Education 2. Dellusional assumption of a new identity including an identity like Jesus Christ etc 3. Persons may be confused about aspect of their own body including gender,or may be uncertan about the boundaries separating the self from the rest of the world. 6. Disrupted volition Goal directed activity is almost universally disrupted in them. The impairment always occurs in areas of routine daily functioning such as work, social relation, self care etc 7. Retreat to an inner world 1. Ties to the external world are almost loosened in this disorder. 2. Withdrawal from reality and involve active disengagement from the environment and elaboration of an inner world in which the person develop illogical and fantastic ideas 8. Disturbed motor behavior 1. Peculiarities of movements are observed 2. Most disturbance are ranged from an executed state of hyper activity to a marked decrease in movements 3. Rigid posturing, mutism, ritualistic mannerism Subtype of schizophrenia 1. Undifferentiated Type This is something of a waste basket category. They meet a criteria for usual diagnosis of schizophrenia including hallucination, delusion disordered thoughts and bizarre behavior. But they do not clearly fit into one of the other type. Also they show indication of perplexity ,confusion, emotional turmoil,delusions of reference, excitement, depression and fear etc. 2. Paranoid type of schizophrenia They show histories of increased suspiciousness and difficulties in interpersonal relations They show absurd, illogical and often changing delusions.Persecutory delusions are common. Abnormal Psychology 6 School of Distance Education They are highly suspicious of relatives and may complaint of being watched, followed, poisoned and talked about. Grandiose delusions delusions are common. These delusions are frequently accompanied by vivid auditory, visual and other hallucination Impairment of critical judgment, unpredictable and occasionally dangerous behavior 3. Catatonic type of schizophrenia Pronounced motor signs, either of an excited or a stuporous type. Patients are highly suggestible and will automatically obey command and or imitate the actions of others (ecoproxia) or mimic their phrases (Ecolalia). • Tendency to remain motionless for hours or even days in a single position(catatonic stupor) • The clinical picture may undergo an abrupt change,with excitement coming on suddenly and may becomeviolent,maytalk or shout,pace rapidly,openly indulge in sexual activity, attempt suicide and impulsively attack and try to kick others. 4. Disorganized type (hebephrenia) • Represents a more severe disintegration of personality. • Usually occurs at an early age, emotional distortion manifested as inappropriate laughter, stillness, peculiar mannerism etc. • Emotional distortion and blunting typically are manifested in inappropriate laughter and silliness,peculiar mannerisms etc. • Speech become incoherent and include considerable baby talk, childish giggling etc. • Patients may invent new words[Neologism] • Auditory hallucination are common 5. Residual type This category used for people who have experienced episodes of schizophrenia that they have recovered sufficiently as not to show prominent psychotic symptom. 6. Schizophreniform disorder Abnormal Psychology 7 School of Distance Education Schizophrenia like psychosis of less than six month duration. Causal factors of schizophrenia Biological causal factors • • Genetic influences • Schizophrenia tends to run in families. Evidence for higher expected rates of schizophrenia among biological relatives. • Strong correlation between closeness of blood relationship • No specific genes identified Twins studies Concordance rate for identical twins is found to be significantly higher than those for fraternal twins. • Adoption studies True separation of hereditary from environmental influence by using adoption strategy. Here concordance rate for schizophrenia is compared for the biological and adaptive relatives of persons who have been adopted out of the biological family at an early age subsequently became schizophrenic. If the rate is greater among the patient's biological than adaptive relatives, a hereditary influence is strongly suggested. • Biochemical factors This factor suggests that mental disoders are due to chemical imbalances. Dopamine hypothesis suggest that schizophrenia is the product of an excess of dopamine activity at certain syntaptic sites. This is based on the observation that all of the early anti schizophrenic drugs had the common property of blocking dopamine mediated neuron transmission. • Neurophysiological factors Imbalance in various nerophysiological processes and inappropriate autonomic arousal. Abnormal brain reaction to stimulations, neurological abnormalities such as reflex hyper activity and deficit performance in non psychological testing are found. • Neuroanatomical factors Abnormal Psychology 8 School of Distance Education • Early brain injury • Obstetrical complications,such as premature birth is found as a factor. • Abnormal enlargement of ventricles.[Ventricles are the hollow areas in brain that is filled with cerebro spinal fluid] • Hypofrontability--Low frontal lobe activation. Psycho social causal factors • Damaging parent-child and family interactions. This involves the following factors. • Schizophrenogenic parents: Parents were routinely assumed to have caused their children's disorders through hostility, deliberate rejection etc. These parents are cruel and abusive. • Destructive parental interactions: Study by Lidz and associate of 14 families with schizophrenic offspring. They failed to find a single couple that functioned as well. 8 out of the 14 family live in a state of severe chronic discord in which continuation of marriage was threatened. Six others achieve a state of equilibrium in which the relationship was maintained at the expense of a basic distortion in family relationship. Faulty communication Gregory Bateson identifies the conflicting and confusing nature of communication among members of family experiencing a schizophrenic out comes. In this pattern parents present the child about ideas, feeling and demands that are mutually incompatible. For e.g.; a mother may be verbally loving and accepting but emotionally anxious and rejecting. Socio cultural factors Lower the socio economic status the higher prevalence of schizophrenia. Treatment 1. Antipsychotic medication; major tranquilizer were introduced in the mid 1950s. 2. Psycho social approaches in treating schizophrenia Family therapy Individual psycho therapy Abnormal Psychology 9 School of Distance Education It is effective in enhancing social adjustment and social role performance of discharged patients. Social skills training and community treatment. DELUSIONAL DISORDER Formerly called paranoia or paranoid disorder. Diagnosis of delusional disorder is difficult because it is not always possible to determine the truth or falsity of an idea. Definitions of delusional disorder in DSM IV usually specifies that an idea must be held as prepositions (complete contrary to the nature) by the majority of a persons in community. Types of delusional disorder 1. Persecutory type The predominant delusional theme is that one or someone to whom one closely related is being subjected to some kind of malevolent treatment such as spying, spreading of false rumors of illegal or immoral behavior. 2. Jealous type The predominant delusional theme is that one’s sexual partner is unfaithful. 3. Erotomanic type The predominant delusional theme is that some person of higher status is in love with or to start sexual liasion with the delusion person. 4. Somatic type The predominant theme is that the affected person is having a unshakable belief about having some physical illness. an 5. Grandiose type The predominant theme is that the affected person is having a belief that he is a person of extra ordinary status, power, ability, talent, duty etc. 6. Mixed type The combination of the above when no single theme predominate. Clinical pictures of delusional disorder Individual feel singled out and taken advantage of mistreated, plotted against, ignored or mistreated by enemies. Abnormal Psychology 10 School of Distance Education Delusion mainly center around one major theme such as financial matters, job etc Ideas of persecution is predominant Apart from delusional system such an individual may appear perfectly normal inconventional emotionally and conduct. Hallucination rarely found. Projective thinking: individual selectively project the action of others to confirm suspiciousness and blames others for their failures. Hostility: anger and hostile Paranoid illumination: the moment when everything ‘false into place’ the individual finally understands the strange feelings and even being experienced. Delusions: it influence and perception may be based on some grains of truth. Causal factors of delusional disorder They do not show a history of normal play with other children or good socialization in terms of warm affectionate relationship. Their relatively unfriendly interpersonal style may make them unpopular with peers This misunderstanding ,suspiciousness or coldly rejecting persons frequently became a target of actual discrimination and mistreatment MOOD DISORDER Mood: A temporary but relatively sustained and pervasive affective state with a more specific and short term emotion. Mood disorder severe alterations in mood and for more prolonged periods of time. 2 key moods-The key moods that is present in mood disorder are mania & depression. • Mania • Depression Mania:This is the phase that is characterised by excitement and euphoria. Depression:This phase is characterised by the feelings of extra ordinary sadness and dejections. Abnormal Psychology 11 School of Distance Education Manic episode” a mood episode lasting atleast one weak, characterized by continuously elevated expansive or irritable mood, sufficiently severe to cause market impairment in social or occupational functioning. Characteristics • Inflated self esteem or grandiose ideas or actions, decreased need of sleep, increase talkativeness • Flight of ideas • Distractibility • Increased psycho motor agitation • Mood disorder can be classified into unipolar disorder and bipolar disorder. UNIPOLAR DISORDER Person experience only depressive episodes.The following are the main types of unipolar disorder. • Dysthymia: for atleast the past two years, the person has been bothered for most of the day, for more days, by a depressed mood, and atleast two other depressive symptoms, but not of sufficient persistent or severity to meet the criteria for major depression. Symptoms of dysthymia The person may experience atleast two of the following six symptoms when depressed. • Poor appetite or over eating • Sleep disturbance or insomnia • Low energy level • Low self esteem • Difficulties in concentration or decision making • Feeling of hopelessness • Adjustment disorder with depressed mood The person reacts with a maladaptive depressed mood to some identifiable stressor occurring within the past 3 months, does not exceed 6 months. Abnormal Psychology 12 School of Distance Education • Major depressive disorder The person has one or more major depressive episodes in the absence of any manic or hypo manic episode. Symptoms • Prominent and persistent depressed mood • Loss of pleasure for atleast two weeks, accompanied by four or more symptoms such as poor appetite, insomnia, psycho motor retardation, fatigue, feeling of breathlessness or ill, inability to concentrate and thoughts of death and suicide. BIPOLAR DISORDER Person experience both manic and depressive episodes. The following are the different types of bipolar disorder. • Cyclothymia, depressed At present or during the past two years, the person experienced episodes resembling dysthymia but also had one or more periods of hypomania. • Bipolar 1 disorder, depressed The person experiences a major depressive episode and has had one or more manic episodes. • Bipolar II disorder, depressed A major depressive episode and had one or more hypo manic episodes. Subtypes of major depressive disorder • Melancholic or endogenous depression. In addition to meeting the criteria of major depressive disorder, a patient has either loss of interest or pleasure in almost al activities. He may experience atleast three of the following symptoms. • Early morning awakening • Depression being worse in the morning • Marked psycho motor retardation • Significant lows of appetite and weight Abnormal Psychology 13 School of Distance Education • Inappropriate or excessive guilt Severe major depression disorder with psychotic features Characterized by lows of contact with reality and including delusions (falls beliefs) or hallucinations may sometimes accompany the other symptoms of major depression. Mood congruent and mood incongruent Delusions and hallucination present are mood congruent. If they are appropriate to serious depression. The mood incongruent means delusional thinking is incongruent means delusional thinking is inconsistent with the predominant mood. Seasonal affective disorder Mood disorder may show seasonal pattern that is atleast two episodes of depression in the past two years occurring at the same time of the year (winter) and full remission of the same time of the year (spring). Schizo affective disorder A person must have a period of illness during which he or she needs the criteria for both a major mood disorder (uni polar and bipolar) and atleast two major symptoms of schizophrenia (hallucination and delusion) Causal factors in mood disorder Biological Factors Hereditary factors Prevalence of mood disorder is higher among blood relatives of persons with clinically diagnosed mood disorder. • Twin study also suggested that they may be a moderate genetic contribution to unipolar depression • 9% of first degree relatives of a persons with bipolar disorder can also be expected to have bipolar disorder • Concordance rates for these disorders are much higher for identical than fraternal twins Bio chemical factors Studies revealed that depression may arise from disruption in the delegate balance of neurotransmitter substances that regulates the brain functioning. Abnormal Psychology 14 School of Distance Education Three neurotransmitters were focused viz norepineprine, dopamines and serotonin because researchers observed that anti depressants seemed to have the effect of increasing the availability of these neurotransmitter at synaptic functions.This lead to monoamine hypothesis that depression was atleast sometimes due to an absolute or relative depletion of one or all of these neuro transmitters. Later this hypothesis was rejected. Neuro endocrine and neuro physiological factors Hormone cortisol is secreted by adrenal glands. Blood plasma level of cortisol known to be elevated in form 50-60% of seriously depressed patients.A potent suppressor of plasma cortisol in normal individuals, dexamethasone fails to suppress cortisol in about 45% of depressed patients. Dexametharone suppression text (DST) was used to assess depressed individuals. People with hypothyroidism often become depressed due to disturbance in hypothalamic pituitary-thyroid axis. Lesions of the left anterior or prefrontal cortex lead to depression. Psycho social causal factors Stressful life events It is divided into five types • Situations that tend to lower self esteem like being fired or failing in exams • Thwarting of an important goal • Developing a physical disease or abnormality that activates ideas of death like diagnosed as having cancer. • Single stressors of overwhelming magnitude such as the death of the child or a parent • Several stressors occurring in a series Diathesis -stress model • It explains how stress interacts with various types of vulnerability factors to reduce depression • The idea that people who eventually develop a disorder differ in some underlying way from those who do not and this difference is known as diathesis(predisposition) • It was assumed that the diathesis was biological in original and but later cognitive and social factors also contribute Abnormal Psychology 15 School of Distance Education Beck’s cognitive theory The one of the most prominent theory of depression for over 30 years is that of Aaron Beck- a psychiatrist. Beck hypothesise that the cognitive symptoms of depression may often proceeds and cause the mood symptoms rather than vice versa. That is, if you are ugly, those thoughts will lead to a depressed mood. According to Beck’s it is these negative cognition that are central to depression. Features of Beck’s theory • They are underlying depressogenic schemas or dysfunctional belief, which are rigid, extreme and counterproductive. For eg: if everyone does not love me, then my life is worthless. • Negative automatic thoughts Thoughts that often occur just below the surplus of the awareness and involve unpleasant pessimistic prediction. These pessimistic predictions tend to centre on three themes of what Beck calls the negative cognitive triad. Negative cognitive traids _Negative thoughts about self (for e.g.: I’m ugly) _Negative thoughts about ones experience and the surrounding world (e.g.: no one loves me) _ Negative thoughts about one’s future (it is hopeless because things will always be this way) Helplessness and hopelessness theory Learned helplessness theory was proposed by Seligman. Learned helplessness produce three deficits. 1) Motivational deficit 2) cognitive deficit and 3) emotional deficit. Hopelessness theory is a revision of helplessness theory by Abramson et all. They proposed that having a pessimistic attribution style in conjunction with one or more negative life events was not sufficient to produce depression unless one first experiences a state of hopelessness. Marriage and family life problem Mood disorders are also caused by marital and family life problems Socio-cultural causal factors • There are cross cultural difference in depressive symptoms, non western culture like China, the rate of depression are low. Abnormal Psychology 16 School of Distance Education • Demographic difference in United States. Poor socio economic class have higher rate of major depression disorder but bipolar disorder are more common in high socio economic classes. Treatment and outcomes • Pharmaco therapy & electro convulsive therapy( ECT) Anti depressants, antipsychotic and antianxiety drugs are all used Antidepressants are chosen from the selective serotonin uptake inhibitors. Lithium therapy It is used as a mood stabilizer in the treatment of depression and mania. Mood stabilizer is often used to describe these drugs because they have both anti manic and anti depressant effects. But there are side effects for lithium like lethargy, decreased motor coordination and gastro intestinal difficulties, also kidney malfunctioning and damage. ECT ECT is often used with seriously depressed patients who may present an immediate and serious suicidal risk. • Psycho therapy Drugs and ECT are combined with individual or group psycho therapy directed at helping a patient develops a more stable long range adjustment. • Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) Two of the best known of depression_ specific psycho therapies for unipolar depression are the cognitive behavioral therapy of Beck and the interpersonal therapy of Klerman,Weissman,colleagues. CBT consists of highly structured, systematic attempts to teach with depression to evaluate their values, believes and negative automatic thoughts systematically; IPT is mainly used in marital relation. • Family and marital therapy Family and marital is also given when required. SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND DEPENDENCE Abnormal Psychology 17 School of Distance Education Addictive behavior: behavior based on the pathological need for a substance/activity, may involve the abuse of substances, such on nicotine, alcohol, cocaine, the excessive ingestion of high calorie food, resulting in external obesity. Psycho active drugs: Those drugs that affect mental functioning; alcohol, nicotine, barbiturates, minor tranquilizers, amphetamines, heroin and marijuana. Tolerance: the need for id amounts of a substance to active the desired effects results from bio chemical changes in the body that affect the rate of metabolism and eliminate alcohol from the body. Withdrawal symptoms: physical symptoms such as sweating, tremors and tension that accompany disturbance from the drug. Alcohol abuse and dependence WHO no longer recommends the term alcoholism but prefer the term alcohol dependence syndrome- “a state, psychic and usually also physical resulting from taking alcohol, characterized by behavioral and other responses that always include a compulsion to take alcohol on a continous/periodic basis inorder to experience its psychic affects, sometimes to avoid the discomfort of its absence, tolerance may/ may not be present. History People of ancient cultures (Egyptian, Greek and Roman) excessively used alcohol. Beer was developed by an Arabian chemist. First alcoholic on record is Cambyses, king of Persia in 6th century BC. Prevalence, commodity and demographics of alcoholism Alcoholism is a major problem in US. Life span of them is about 12 years shorter than that of the organized citizen. Alcohol use is the 3 rd major cause of death In US Alcoholic; refers to a persons with a serious drinking problem whose drinking impairs his/her like real adjustment in terms of health personal relationships and occupational functioning. Alcoholism: refers to a dependence on alcohol that serious and interacts with the life adjustment. Development of alcoholic dependence Excessive drinking can be viewed as progressing insidiously from early to middle – to late – stage alcoholism, although some alcoholics do not follow this progressively developing pattern.Many studies shown that alcohol is a dangerous Abnormal Psychology 18 School of Distance Education systemic poison even in small amounts, other believe that in moderate amount it is not harmful to most people. Small amounts of red wine can even serve as a protective factual in heart disease.For pregnant women, even moderate amounts are believed to be dangerous. Physical effects of chronic alcohol use Alcohol that is taken in must be assimilated by the body (05-10% eliminated through breath, urine & perspiration). The work of assimilation is done by the liver, but when large amounts of alcohol are ingested, the liver may be seriously overworked & eventually suffer irreversible damage. In fact, from 1530% of heavy drinkers develop cirrhosis of the liver – a disorder involving extensive stiffening of the blood vessels. Alcohol is also a high calorie deug. A pint of whisky provides about 1200 calories, which is approximately half the ordinary caloric requirements for a day. This consumption of alcohol reduces a drinker’s appetite for other food – because alcohol has no nutritional value, the excessive drinker often, suffer from malnutrition. Psychological effects of Alcohol abuse and dependence Chronic drinker suffers from chronic fatigue oversensitivity & depression. Excessive drinking results in lowered feelings of adequacy & worth, impaired reasoning & judgments & gradual personality deterioration. Drinker assumes increasingly lesser responsibility, loses pride in personal appearance, neglects spouse & family, becomes irritable & unwilling to discuss the problem. As judgment become impaired, an excessive drinker may be unable to hold a job & generally becomes unqualified to cope with new demands. Personality disorganization and deterioration is also seen among alcoholics. Loss of employments of marital breakup is also common. General health is also deteriorated. Psychosis associated with alcoholism Several acute psychotic reactions are also seen. 1) Alcohol withdrawal delirium Alcohol withdrawal delirium usually happens following a prolonged drinking spree when the person is in a state of withdrawal. Slight noises or sudden moving objects may cause considerable excitement and agitation. Symptoms of alcohol withdrawal delirium includes Abnormal Psychology 19 School of Distance Education _ Disorientation for time and place. _ vivid hallucination _ acute fear _Extreme suggestively _ Marked tremors of hands, tongue & lips. 2) Alcohol Ammestic disorder (korasakoff’s syndrome) The person suffering from alcohol amnesic disorder may suffer from memory deficit. They may not recognize pictures, faces, rooms and other object that they ‘ve just seen, although they may feel they are familiar. They are delusional and disoriented for time & place. They also suffer from vitamin B deliciency (thaiamine) Casual factors 1) Biological factors The development of an alcohol addiction is a complex process involving many elements – constitutional vulnerability & environmental encouragement as well as the unique biochemical properties of certain psychoactive substances can lead to addictive behavior. Neurobiology of addiction Drugs differ in terms of their biochemical properties as well as how rapidly they enter the brain. There are several routes of administration – oral, nasal & intravenous. Alcohol is usually drunk which is the slowest route. Cocaine is often self administrated by injection or taken nasally. Central to the neuron chemical process underlying addiction is the role the drug plays in activating the ‘pleasure pathway”- the meroscorticolimbic dopamine pathway (MCLP) – is the centre of psychoactive drug activation in the brain. Craving & genetic vulnerability Alcoholism clearly tends to run in families.A review of 39 studies of families of 6251 alcoholics & 4083 non alcoholics reported that 1/3 of alcoholoics had atleast one parent with alcohol problem. Study of children of alcoholics by cloninger & colleagues (1986) reported that, for males having one alcoholic parent increased the rate of alcoholism from 11.4% to 29.5% & having 2 parents increased the rate to 41.27%. For females with one alholic parent the rate is 9.01, two parents the rate is 25%. Genetic influences and learning Abnormal Psychology 20 School of Distance Education Learning factors appear to play an important part in the development of constitutional reaction tendencies. The person must be exposed to the substance to a sufficient degree for the addictive behavior to appear. Peer pressures, parental example & advertising also influence addictive behavior. Living in an environment that promotes initial as well as continuing use of the substances. 2) Psycho social casual factors Alcoholics develop a powerful psychological as well as social dependence.The following are the psychosocial causal factors. Failures in parental guidance Stable family relationship & parental guidance are extremely important molding influences for children & this stability is often lacking in families of alcoholics. Children who have parents who are extensive alcohol or drug abusers are vulnerable to develop addiction. The experiences or lessons we learn from important figures in our early years have a significance importance on us as audits - parent substance use is associated with early adolescent drug use. Children who’re exposed to the negative role models in their liver & vulnerable. Negative socialization factors might influence alcohol use. Psychological vulnerability Many alcoholics tend to be emotionally immature, expect a great deal of the world, requires praise & appreciation, react to failure with marked feelings of hurt & inferiority, have low frustration tolerance. Persons of risk for developing alcoholism are significantly more impulsive & aggressive Stress, tension reduction & reinforcement. Typical alcoholic is discontented with his life & is unable or unwilling to tolerate stress & tension. Also subjects drank to relax. Anyone who finds alcohol to be tension- reducing is in danger of becoming an alcoholic, even without any stressful life situation. According to Cox & Klinger describe a motivational model of alcohol use, i.e. the final common pathway of alcohol is motivation.i.e, a person decided consciously or unconsciously, whether to consume a particular drink of alcohol – alcohol is consumed to bring about affective changes, such as mood – altering effects . In short, alcohol is consumed because it is reinforcing to the individual. Expectations of social success Cognitive expectations play an important role both in the initiation of drinking and in the maintenance of drinking behavior once the person has begun Abnormal Psychology 21 School of Distance Education to use alcohol. Young asdolesence expect that alcohol use will lower tension and anxiety and increase sexual desire and pleasure in life- which is referred to as the reciprocal influence model. Marital and other intimate relationships Excessive drinking often begins during crisis periods in marital or other personal relationships, particularly crsis that lead to hurt and self devaluation. This is considered as one of the cause of divorce in U.S. Socio cultural factors Culture has become dependent on alcohol as a social lubricant and a means of reducing tensions. Treatment Alcoholism is difficult to treat because they refuse to admit that they have a problem and many leave before therapy is completed. A multi disciplinary approach to the treatment of drinking problems appears to be most effective because the problems are often complex, requiring flexibility and individualization of treatment procedures. Use of medications in treating alcohols Biological approaches include a variety of treatment measures such as medicines to reduce craving, to ease the deterioration process and to treat co occurring mental health problems. 1) Medications to block the desire to drink Disulfiram – a drug that causes vilolet vomiting when followed by ingestion of alcohol. Naltrexone – help to reduce the craving for alcohol. 2) Medications to lower the side effects of alcohol withdrawal Drugs like Valium help to overcome motor exitement, nausea and vomiting. Psychological treatment approaches Treatment often followed by medical treatments including family counsiling and the use of community resources relating to employment etc. 1) Group therapy In the confrontational give and take of Group therapy, alcoholics oftenforced to face their problems and their tendencies to deny or to minimize their involvement in their troubles when they describe them to a knowing audience Abnormal Psychology 22 School of Distance Education of “peers”. It may be difficult for them to hide or deny drinking problems when they are confronted by persons who have had similar problems Group therapy provide opportunity for them to see new possibilities for coping with circumstances that have led to their difficulties. 2) Environmental intervention Environmental support is an important ingredient to alleviate an alcoholics aversive life situation. They become separated from family and friends and either lose their jobs.They are so lonely and live in impoverished neighbourhoods. Simply helping alcohols learn more effective coping techniques may not be enough if their social environment remains hostile and threatening. For alcoholics who have been hospitalized, halfway houses are designed to assist them in their return to family and community. The relapses and continued deterioration that alcohols often experience are often associated with their lack of close relationship with family as well as living in a stressful event. 3) Behavior therapy 1. Aversive conditioning- presentation of a wide range of noxious stimuli with alcohol consumption in order to suppress drinking behavior. 2. Intramuscular injection of emetine hydrochlorid, an emetic – before experiencing the nausea that results from the injection, a patient is given alcohol, so that the sight, smell and taste of the beverage become associated with severe retching and vomiting. I.e. a conditional aversion to taste to smell of alcohol develops. DRUG ABUSE Effects of Morphine and Heroin Introduced into the body by smoking, snorting (inhaling the powder),eating ; “skin popping” or “main lining”(introducing the drug via hypodermic injection) skin popping – injecting the liquefied drug just beneath the skin and maintaining- injecting the drug directly in to the blood stream. The following are the effects of morphine and heroine: Vomiting and nausea also known to be a part of immediate effects. Abnormal Psychology 23 School of Distance Education The rush is followed by pleasant feeling of relaxation euphoria etc last for 4 to 6 phases. Use for long period results in a physiological craving for the drug. When people addicted to opiate do not get a dose of the drug within approximately 8 hours, they start to experience Withdrawal Symptoms(WS) WS include symptoms of runny nose, fearing eyes, perspiration, restlessness, increased respiration rate and an intensified desire for the drug- a feeling chilliness alternate with motor disturbances of flushing and excessive sweating, vomiting, diarrhea, head ache, tremors, insomnia etc leads to a gradual deterioration of well being. Cocaine and Amphetamines Cocaine- a plant product- high price may be injected by sniffing, swallowing or injection. Cocaine precipitates a euphoric state of 4 to 6 hours duration during which they experience feelings of confidence and contentment followed by head ache, dizziness and restlessness. When chronically abused, acute toxic psychotic symptoms may occur like visual, auditory hallucination. Cocaine stimulates the cortex of brain, including sleeplessness and excitement. Amphetamines Earliest amphetamine – Benzedrine or amphetanic sulfate was first synthesized in 1927.It was initially known as “wonder pills” that helped people stay alert or awake and function temporarily at a level beyond normal. There is a tendency to suppress appetite. Today amphetamine is used medically for curb in the appetite when weight reduction is desirable. Also used for alleviating mild feeling of depression, relieving fatigue etc. Barbiturates Once widely used by physicians to calm patients and induce sleep. Barbiturates act as depressants to slow down the action of the central nervous system and significantly reduce performance on cognitive tasks. An individual experiences a feeling of relaxation in which tensions seem to disappear. Strong doses produce sleep immediately. Excess doses result in paralysis of the brain. Impaired decision making and problem solving, slow speech, sudden mood shifts are common. LSD and Related Drugs Hallucinogens are drugs whose properties are thought to induce hallucination. However these preparations usually do not intact “create” sensory images but distort them, So that individual sees or hears things in different and unusual ways. These are often referred to as psychotics. The major drugs in this category are LSD(Lysergic acid Diethylamide), mescaline and psilocybin. Abnormal Psychology 24 School of Distance Education LSD, the most potent of the hallucinogen, the orderless, colorless and tasteless drug can produce intoxication with an amount smaller than a grain of salt. After taking LSD a person typically goes through about 8 hours of changes in sensory perception, mood swings and feeling of depersonalization and detachment. The LSD experience is not always pleasant. It can be extremely traumatic and the distorted object and sounds, the illusory colors and the new thoughts can be terrifying. An interesting and unusual phenomenon that may occur following the use of LSD is a flash back, an involuntary recurrence of perceptual distortions or hallucinations weeks or even months after taking the drug. Marijuana Although marijuana is classified as a mild hallucinogen, there are significant differences in the nature, intensity and duration of its effects as compared with those induced by LSD. Marijuana comes from the leaves and flowering tops of the hemp plant, cannabis sativa. In its prepared state, marijuana consists chiefly of the dried green leaves hence the colloquial name grass. It is ordinarily smoked in the form of cigarettes or in pipes. Marijuana is related to a strong drug. When marijuana is smoked and inhaled, a state of slight intoxication results. This state is one of the mild euphoria distinguished by increased feeling of wellbeing, heightened perceptual acuity & pleasure, relaxation often accompanied by a sensation to drifting or floating away .sensory inputs are intensified- STM may be affected. Psychological effects include immediate increase in heart rate, a slowing of reaction time, a slight contraction of pupil size, a dry mouth and an increased appetite. Caffeine and nicotine Although these do not represent the extensive and self destructive problems found in drug and alcohol disorders, they are important in causing physical and mental health problem in our society due to, * These drugs are easy to abuse * These drugs are readily available * These drugs have addictive properties * It is difficult to guilt using these drugs * Difficulty in dealing with withdrawal symptoms Caffeine Abnormal Psychology 25 School of Distance Education It is found in commonly available drinks and foods * Problems can occur as a result excessive caffeine intake * Negative effects include intoxication rather than withdrawal * Withdrawal from caffeine does not produce severe symptoms of restlessness, nervousness excitement, insomnia and other gastro intestinal complaints. Nicotine It is the chief active ingredient in tobacco, it is found in such items as cigarettes, chewing tobacco and ligers. Nicotine dependency syndrome, which always begins during the adolescent years and may continue in the adult life as a difficulty to breathe and health endangering habits. The nicotine withdrawal disorder results from reducing the intake of nicotine containing substances after an individual has acquired physical dependence on them. The symptom including craving for nicotine, irritability, frustration or anger, anxiety, difficulty concentrating, restlessness, decrease the heart rate etc. Abnormal Psychology 26 School of Distance Education MODULE 2 ASSESSMENT The relationship between assessment and diagnosis It is often important to have an adequate classification of the presenting problem for a number of reasons in any case, a formal diagnosis is necessary before insurance. Claims can be field, clinically; knowledge of a person’s type of disorder can help in planning and maintaining the appropriate treatment. Administratively, it is essential to know the range of diagnostic problems that are represented among the patient or client population and for which treatment facilities need to be available. Taking a client history For most clinical purposes, a formal diagnostic classification per second is much less important than having a basic understanding of the individuals history, intellectual functioning, Personality characteristics and environmental resources and pressures. That is an adequate assessment includes much more than the diagnostic label. Personality factors In addition, assessment needs to include a description of any relevant long term personality characteristics. The social context It is also important to assess the social context in which the individual operates. What kinds of environmental demands all typically placed on the person, and what supports or special stressors exist in his or her life situation. Assessment of the physical organism Abnormal Psychology 27 School of Distance Education In some situations of with certain psychological problems, a medical evaluation is necessary to rule out physical abnormalities that may be causing or contributing to the problems. The medical evaluation may include both a general physical and special examinations aimed at assessing the structural and functional integrity of the brain as the behaviorally significant physical system. 1. The general physical examination The physical examination consists of the kinds of procedures most of us have experience in getting a “medical checkup”. Typically, a medical history is obtained and the major systems of the body are checked. This part of the assessment procedures is of obvious import for disorders that entail physical problems, such as somatoform, addictive and organic brain syndromes. In additions a variety of organic conditions, including various hormonal irregularities, can produce in some people behavioral symptoms that closely mimic those of mental disorders usually, considered to have predominantly psycho social origins. 2. The neurological examination Because brain pathology is sometimes involved or suspected to underline some mental disorders, a specialized neurological examination can be given in addition to the general medical examination. This may involve getting an electroencephalograph (EEG) to assess the brain wave patterns in awake and sleeping stages. Anatomical brain scans 1. CAT ( Computerised Axial Tomography ) Anatomical brain scans, radiological technology, such as computerized axial tomography, known In brief as the CAT scan reveals images of parts of the brain that might be diseased. 2. MRI Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the technique of choices in detecting structured anatomical anomalies in the central nervous system, particularly the brain. 3. PET scans (position emission tomography) PET scan allows for an appraisal of how an organ is functioning by measuring metabolic processes. The PET scan provides metabolic portraits by tracking natural compounds like glucose as they are metabolized by the brain or other organs. The neuropsychological examination Abnormal Psychology 28 School of Distance Education The techniques described so far are fairly accurate in identifying abnormalities in the brains physical properties. Such abnormalities are very often accompanied by gross impairment in behavior and varied psychological deficits. Although the nature of the latter may not be accurately predicted even after the precisely localizing these psychological impairments due to organic brain abnormalities may become manifest before any organic brain lesion is detectable by scanning or other means. This need is met by a growing care of psychologists specializing in neuropsychological assessment, which involves the use of an expanding array of testing devices to measure a person’s cognitive, perceptual and motor performance as clues to the extent and location of brain damage. In many instances of knowledge of suspected organic brain involvement a clinical neuropsychologist will administer a test battery to a patient. The person’s performance on standardized tasks, particularly perceptual motor ones, can give valuable clues about any cognitive and intellectual impairment following brain damage. Many neurophysiologists prefer to select a highly individualized array of tests to administer, depending on a patients case history and other available information. Psychological assessment Psychological assessment attempts to provide a realistic picture of an individual in interaction with his or her social environment. This picture includes relevant information concerning the individual’s personality make up and present level of functioning, as well as information about the stressors and resources in his or her life situation. For example, early in the process, clinicians may act like puzzle solves, absorbing as much as information about the client as possible. Present feelings, attitudes, memories, demographic facts and so on and trying to fit the pieces together into a meaningful pattern. 1. Assessment interviews An assessment interview often considered the central dimension of the assessment process, usually involves a face to face interaction in which a clinician obtains information about various aspects of a patients situations, behavior from a simple set of questions or prompts, to a more extended and detailed format. It may be relatively open in character with an interviewer making moment to moment decisions about his or her next question based on responses to prior ones, or it may be more tightly controlled and structured so as to ensure that a particular set of questions is covered. In the later case the interviewer may choose from a member of highly structured, standardized interview formats whose reliability has been established in prior research. As used reliability means simply that two or more interviewers asserting the same client will generate Abnormal Psychology 29 School of Distance Education highly similar conclusions about the client, a type of consensus that research shows can by no means be taken for granted. Structured and unstructured interview Although we know of few clinicians who express enthusiasm for the more controlled and structured type of assessment interview (preferring the freedom to explore as they feel responses merit).the research data show it to yield far more reliable results. in general, than the more flexible format. On the other hand, every rule has its exceptions, and we have seen brilliantly conducted assessment Interviews where each question was fashioned on the spur of the moment. In most instances, however an assessor would be wise to conduct an interview that is carefully structured in terms of goals, comprehensive symptom review, other content to be explored, and the type of relationship the interviewer attempts to establish with the person. Computerized interview Computer programs with highly sophisticated branching subroutines are available to ”Tailor make” a diagnostic interview for a patient .For example, described a program called the computerized diagnostic interview for children that can conduct a standard psychiatric interview The clinical observation of behavior One of the traditional and most useful assessment tools that a clinician has available is direct observation of a patient’s characteristics behavior. The main purpose of direct observation s t learn more about the person’s psychological functioning through the objective description of appearance and behavior in various contexts. Clinical observation refers to the clinician’s objective description of the person’s appearance and behavior –his or her personal hygiene, emotional responses, any depression, anxiety, aggression, hallucination or delusions he or she may manifest. Ideally, clinical observation takes place in the natural environment (such as classroom or home) but it is more likely to take place upon admission to a clinic or hospital In addition to making their own observation, many clinicians enlist their patient’s help by providing instruction in self-monitoring-self observation and objective reporting of behavior, thoughts and feeling as they occur in various natural setting Rating scale As in the case of interview, the use of rating scale in clinical observation and in self reports helps not only to organize information but also to encourage reliability and objectivity. That is, the formal structure of a scale is likely to keep the observer’s inferences to a minimum. The most useful rating scale commonly Abnormal Psychology 30 School of Distance Education used are those that enable a rater to indicate not only the presence or absence of a trait or behavior but also its prominence. One of the rating scales most widely used for recoding observations in clinical practice and in psychiatric research is the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS). The BPRS provides a structured and quantifiable format for rating clinical symptoms, such as somatic concern, anxiety, emotional withdrawal, guilt feelings, hostility, suspiciousness, and unusual thought patterns. A similar but more specifically targeted instrument, the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD) has become almost the standard in this respect for selecting clinically depressed research subject. Psychological tests Interview and behavioral observation are relatively direct attempts to determine a person’s beliefs, attitudes, and problems. Psychological tests, on the other hand, are more indirect means of assessing psychological test(as opposed to the recreational ones sometimes appearing in newspaper and magazines) are standardized sets of procedures or tasks for obtaining samples of behavior; a subject’s responses to the standardized stimuli are compared with those of other people having comparable demographic characteristics, usually through established test norms or test score distributions Two general categories of psychological tests for use in clinical practice are intelligence test and personality tests Intelligence Tests A clinician can choose from a wide range of intelligence tests. The Wechsler intelligence scale for children-revised (WISC-3) and the current edition of the Stanford–binet intelligence scale are widely used in clinical settings for measuring the intellectual abilities of children. Probably the most commonly used test for measuring adult intelligence is the Wechsler adult intelligence scalerevised (WAIS-3).It includes both verbal and performance material and consists of 11 subjects. A brief description of two of the subjects will serve to illustrate the type of functions the WAIS-3 measures. Vocabulary (verbal): this subtest consists of a list of words to define that are presented orally to the individual. This task is designed to evaluate the individual vocabulary. This has been shown to be highly related to general intelligence. Digit span (performance): this subtest, a test of short term memory, consists of having a sequence of numbers administrated orally. The individual is asked to repeat the digits in the order administrated. Another task in this subtest involves remembering the numbers, holding them in memory, and revealing the order sequence- the individual is instructed to say them backward. Abnormal Psychology 31 School of Distance Education Projective personality test There are a great many tests designed to measure personal characteristics other than intellectual facility. It is customary to group these personality tests into projective and objective tests. Projective tests are unstructured in that they rely on various ambiguous stimuli, such as inkblots or pictures, rather than explicit verbal questions, and the persons responses are not limited to the true, false or cannot say correctly. 1.Rorschach Inkblot Test The Rorschach, the Rorschach test is named after the Swiss psychiatrist Herman Rorschach, who initiated experimental use of inkblots in personality assessment in 1991. Use of the Rorschach in clinical assessment is complicated and requires considerable training. Methods of administrating the test vary, and some approaches can take several hours and hence must complete for time with other essential clinical service. 2. The Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) TAT was introduced in 1935 by C.D Morgan and Henry Murray of the Harvard Psychological clinic. It still is widely used in clinical practice today. The TAT uses a series of simple pictures, some highly representational and others quite abstract about which a subject is instructed to make up stories. The context of the pictures much of it depicting people in various contexts is highly ambiguous as to action and motives that subjects tend to reject their conflict and worries into it. Objective Personality Test Objective personality tests are structured that is they typically use questionnaires, self inventories or Rating scales in which questions or items are carefully phrased and alternative response are specified as choice 1.MMPI The MMPI is one of the major structured inventories for personality assessment.MMPI is the Minnesota multiphasic personality inventory (MMPI) now called the MMPI-2 after a revision in 1989 .We focus on it here because in many ways it is the prototype and the standard of this class of instrument. Clinical scales in MMPI Abnormal Psychology 32 School of Distance Education Scale 1 Hypochondriasis (HS) Measures excessive somatic concern and physical Scale 2 Depression (D) Measures symptomatic depression Scale 3 Hysteria (HY) Measures hysteroid personality features Scale 4 Psychopathic deviate (pd) Measures antisocial tendencies Scale 5 Masculinity feminity (mf) Measures gender role reversal Scale 6 Paranoia (pa) Measures suspicious paranoid ideations Scale 7 Psychasthenia (pt) Measures anxiety and obsessive worrying behaviour Scale 8 Schizophrenia (sc) Measures pecularities in thinking feeling and social behavior Scale 9 Hypomania(ma) Measures unrealistically elated mood state and tendencies to yield to impulses. Scale 10 Social introversion(si) Measures social anxiety withdrawal and over worrying REFERENCES 1.Carson,RC,Butcher,N,Mineka,S(1996).Abnormal Psychology and Modern Life, (10th.ed)Harper Collins Inc,New York 2. Hurlock.E.B (1976) Personality Development,(IMH Ed).New York.Mc Graw Hill Inc. 3.Sarason,IG.,&Sarason,BR.,(1998)Abnormal Psychology: Maladaptive Behaviour,New Delhi: prentice Hall of India. The Problem of ********** Abnormal Psychology 33