Classifying and Diagnosing Schizophrenia

    Cards (21)

    • What are Positive symptoms of Sz?

      An excess or distortion of normal behaviour
    • What are Negative symptoms of Sz?
      A reduction or loss of normal behaviour
    • What are the 3 positive symptoms of Sz?
      • Hallucinations
      • Delusions
      • Disorganised Speech
    • What are Hallucinations?
      Sensory experiences that have no basis in reality - the most common are auditory hallucinations but they can also be visual, tactile, or olfactory
    • What are Delusions?
      Beliefs that have no basis in reality - delusions will make sense to the person with Sz but will seem bizarre to others
    • What is Disorganised Speech?
      The person will struggle to speak coherently - They may skip words or slide from one topic to another midsentence
    • What are the 3 Negative symptoms of Sz?
      • Speech Poverty
      • Avolition
      • Affective Flattening
    • What is Speech Poverty?
      A reduction in the amount and quality of speech
    • What is Avolition?
      A loss of interest in activities that would usually be enjoyed
    • What is Affective Flattening?
      The person will not express emotion easily - This could be seen in their facial expressions, or heard in their tone of voice, or shown in their body language
    • What are the 2 manuals used to diagnose Sz?
      • DSM
      or
      • ICD
    • How is Sz diagnosed using the DSM?
      A person must show two or more symptoms for at least a month
      • At least one symptom has to be positive
    • How is Sz diagnosed using the ICD?
      A person must show two or more symptoms for at least a month
      • Two negatives are sufficient
    • What is Validity?
      • The quality of being logically or factually correct
      • If a person receives a Sz diagnosis, they truly do have it
    • What is Reliability?
      • Consistent in quality or performance; able to be relied upon
      • The classification always results in the same diagnosis regardless of who uses it
    • What factors can affect the Validity or Reliability of Sz diagnosis?
      • Inter-rater reliability
      • Culture Bias
      • Gender Bias
      • Co-morbidity
      • Symptom overlap
    • Inter-rater reliability research evidence:
      • Researchers gave two psychiatrists descriptions of 100 patients. They were asked to diagnose them using the DSM and the ICD
      • One psychiatrist diagnosed 26 using the DSM and 44 using the ICD
      • The second psychiatrist diagnosed 13 using the DSM and 24 using the ICD
    • Culture bias research evidence:
      Research has found that African-Americans are 2.4 times more likely to be diagnosed with Sz than white individuals
    • Gender Bias research evidence:
      • A study asked 290 psychiatrists to read a case study of a patient's behaviour and give them a diagnosis
      • When the patient was described as male, 56% gave a diagnosis
      • This dropped to 20% when the patient was described as female
    • Co-morbidity research evidence:
      Research has found that patients with Sz:
      • 50% also have depression
      • 47% also have a substance abuse disorder
      • 25% showed characteristics of OCD
    • Symptom overlap research evidence:
      Bipolar disorder also has symptoms of delusions and avolition