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Chapter One: Past and Present

What is Psychological Abnormality?

  • Clinical Scientists: gather info systematically in order to describe, predict, and explain the phenomena they study

  • Clinical Practitioners: detect, assess, and treat abnormal patterns of functioning

  • There’s no definition of abnormal behavior that’s accepted by everyone

  • Psychological abnormalities are defined by general criteria in society

Deviance, Distress, Dysfunction, and Danger

  • Common feature across definitions: the four d’s

  • Deviance - going against social norms

  • Distress - causes the sufferer distress (subjective) or could cause distress for the people around you

  • Dysfunction - interferes with the person’s ability to conduct daily activities in a constructive way

  • Dangerous (however, vast majority of ppl with disorder aren’t dangerous)

  • Influences:

    • Social norms

    • Culture

    • Biological, economical, societal context

The Elusive Nature of Abnormality

  • Szasz: mental illness is created by culture to control people

    • ex: women and hysteria

    • Everything is on a continuum, ‘disorders’ are just variations of genetics

    • Called mental illness invalid and a myth

  • Eccentrics: display abnormalities but don’t follow the four d’s

    • Weeks: fifteen dif characteristics in eccentrics

  • As time passes, the social idea of deviance changes

    • ex: tattoos are no longer deviant

What is Treatment?

  • Treatment: procedure designed to change abnormal behavior into more normal behavior

  • Essential features of all therapy forms:

    • Sufferer / Patient

    • Trained healer / Therapist

    • Therapeutic contacts

How Was Abnormality Viewed and Treated in the Past?

Ancient Views and Treatments

  • Prehistoric societies believed that all events around and within them resulted from the actions of spirits - abnormal behavior was caused by evil spirits

    • Would drill holes in skulls to exorcize demons: trephination

    • Treatment for severe abnormal behavior (hallucinations, melancholia)

    • Exorcism: priest would recite prayers and whip / starve the person

Greek and Roman Views and Treatments

  • Hippocrates thought mental illness meant something was physically wrong

  • 500 BC-500 AD

  • Abnormal behavior was a disease arising from internal physical problems

  • Brain pathology resulted from an imbalance of four humors

    • Too much yellow vile caused mania

    • Too much black vile caused depression

    • Blood

    • Phlegm

  • Treatment: quiet life, bleeding, exercise, celibacy, diet

Europe in the Middle Ages: Demonology Returns

  • 500-1350

  • Related to the catholic church rejecting science and controlling education

  • Terrible time to live (plagues, wars, etc.), causing abnormal behavior to increase

    • Mass madness

  • Treatment: exorcism, death, hospitalization, torture

The Renaissance and the Rise of Asylums

  • 1400-1700

  • Johann Weyer: mind is as susceptible to sickness as the body

    • First physician to specialize in mental illness

    • Founder of modern study of psychopathology

  • Asylums: institutions whose primary purpose was to care for people with mental illness

  • Once asylums began to overflow, they virtually became prisons for patients

The Nineteenth Century: Reform and Moral Treatment

  • Benjamin Rush: father of psychology in America, believed in moral treatment

  • Treated patients like humans instead of possessed entities

  • Downfall of moral treatment: ran out of money, overcrowding, and low recovery rates

The Early Twentieth Century: The Somatogenic and Psychogenic Perspectives

  • Dual perspectives

  • Somatogenic Perspective: Abnormal behaviors are rooted in biology (physical causes)

    • Emil Kraepelin: Physical things can happen to you to cause mental dysfunction

      • ex: fatigue ➝ mental dysfunction

      • Developed the first modern system for classifying abnormal behavior

    • Biological discoveries that linked the physical and the mental

      • Untreated syphilis causes mental disorders

      • Some biological claims led to proposals for eugenic sterilization

  • Psychogenic Perspective: Abnormal behaviors are rooted in psychology

    • Freud: psychoanalysis and outpatient/talking therapy

    • Hypnotism: changing mental states

    • Psychoanalysis: A form of discussion where clinicians help patients gain insight into their unconscious psychological processes

    • First signs of outpatient therapy

  • Today, people are still not very enlightened about mental disorders

Recent Decades and Current Trends

  • New psychotropic medications discovered in 1950s, led to deinstitutionalization

    • Antipsychotic drugs: correct distorted thinking

    • Antidepressant drugs

    • Anti-anxiety drugs

    • Outpatient care

  • Today: primarily use outpatient care, things are less expensive, insurance covers more, more programs dedicated to specific disorders.

A Growing Emphasis on Preventing Disorders and Promoting Mental Health

  • Looking at social factors

  • Promoting mental health

  • Looking at kids early

  • Positive Psychology: Study and enhancement of positive feelings, traits, abilities, and group-directed virtues

Technology and Mental Health

  • New triggers and vehicles: people can find become more easily radicalized with groups online

  • Digital distractions: causes issues with our attention spans

  • Tele-mental health services and mental health apps

  • Web-based misinformation

A

Chapter One: Past and Present

What is Psychological Abnormality?

  • Clinical Scientists: gather info systematically in order to describe, predict, and explain the phenomena they study

  • Clinical Practitioners: detect, assess, and treat abnormal patterns of functioning

  • There’s no definition of abnormal behavior that’s accepted by everyone

  • Psychological abnormalities are defined by general criteria in society

Deviance, Distress, Dysfunction, and Danger

  • Common feature across definitions: the four d’s

  • Deviance - going against social norms

  • Distress - causes the sufferer distress (subjective) or could cause distress for the people around you

  • Dysfunction - interferes with the person’s ability to conduct daily activities in a constructive way

  • Dangerous (however, vast majority of ppl with disorder aren’t dangerous)

  • Influences:

    • Social norms

    • Culture

    • Biological, economical, societal context

The Elusive Nature of Abnormality

  • Szasz: mental illness is created by culture to control people

    • ex: women and hysteria

    • Everything is on a continuum, ‘disorders’ are just variations of genetics

    • Called mental illness invalid and a myth

  • Eccentrics: display abnormalities but don’t follow the four d’s

    • Weeks: fifteen dif characteristics in eccentrics

  • As time passes, the social idea of deviance changes

    • ex: tattoos are no longer deviant

What is Treatment?

  • Treatment: procedure designed to change abnormal behavior into more normal behavior

  • Essential features of all therapy forms:

    • Sufferer / Patient

    • Trained healer / Therapist

    • Therapeutic contacts

How Was Abnormality Viewed and Treated in the Past?

Ancient Views and Treatments

  • Prehistoric societies believed that all events around and within them resulted from the actions of spirits - abnormal behavior was caused by evil spirits

    • Would drill holes in skulls to exorcize demons: trephination

    • Treatment for severe abnormal behavior (hallucinations, melancholia)

    • Exorcism: priest would recite prayers and whip / starve the person

Greek and Roman Views and Treatments

  • Hippocrates thought mental illness meant something was physically wrong

  • 500 BC-500 AD

  • Abnormal behavior was a disease arising from internal physical problems

  • Brain pathology resulted from an imbalance of four humors

    • Too much yellow vile caused mania

    • Too much black vile caused depression

    • Blood

    • Phlegm

  • Treatment: quiet life, bleeding, exercise, celibacy, diet

Europe in the Middle Ages: Demonology Returns

  • 500-1350

  • Related to the catholic church rejecting science and controlling education

  • Terrible time to live (plagues, wars, etc.), causing abnormal behavior to increase

    • Mass madness

  • Treatment: exorcism, death, hospitalization, torture

The Renaissance and the Rise of Asylums

  • 1400-1700

  • Johann Weyer: mind is as susceptible to sickness as the body

    • First physician to specialize in mental illness

    • Founder of modern study of psychopathology

  • Asylums: institutions whose primary purpose was to care for people with mental illness

  • Once asylums began to overflow, they virtually became prisons for patients

The Nineteenth Century: Reform and Moral Treatment

  • Benjamin Rush: father of psychology in America, believed in moral treatment

  • Treated patients like humans instead of possessed entities

  • Downfall of moral treatment: ran out of money, overcrowding, and low recovery rates

The Early Twentieth Century: The Somatogenic and Psychogenic Perspectives

  • Dual perspectives

  • Somatogenic Perspective: Abnormal behaviors are rooted in biology (physical causes)

    • Emil Kraepelin: Physical things can happen to you to cause mental dysfunction

      • ex: fatigue ➝ mental dysfunction

      • Developed the first modern system for classifying abnormal behavior

    • Biological discoveries that linked the physical and the mental

      • Untreated syphilis causes mental disorders

      • Some biological claims led to proposals for eugenic sterilization

  • Psychogenic Perspective: Abnormal behaviors are rooted in psychology

    • Freud: psychoanalysis and outpatient/talking therapy

    • Hypnotism: changing mental states

    • Psychoanalysis: A form of discussion where clinicians help patients gain insight into their unconscious psychological processes

    • First signs of outpatient therapy

  • Today, people are still not very enlightened about mental disorders

Recent Decades and Current Trends

  • New psychotropic medications discovered in 1950s, led to deinstitutionalization

    • Antipsychotic drugs: correct distorted thinking

    • Antidepressant drugs

    • Anti-anxiety drugs

    • Outpatient care

  • Today: primarily use outpatient care, things are less expensive, insurance covers more, more programs dedicated to specific disorders.

A Growing Emphasis on Preventing Disorders and Promoting Mental Health

  • Looking at social factors

  • Promoting mental health

  • Looking at kids early

  • Positive Psychology: Study and enhancement of positive feelings, traits, abilities, and group-directed virtues

Technology and Mental Health

  • New triggers and vehicles: people can find become more easily radicalized with groups online

  • Digital distractions: causes issues with our attention spans

  • Tele-mental health services and mental health apps

  • Web-based misinformation