schizophrenia

    Cards (12)

    • What are the two major systems for the classification of mental disorder?
      • ICD-10
      • DSM-5
    • How do the DSM-5 and the ICD-10 differ in terms of classifying schizophrenia?
      • for the DSM-5 one or more positive symptoms must be present
      • for the ICD-10 two or more negative symptoms are sufficient
    • What are the positive symptoms of schizophrenia?
      • hallucinations - distorted perceptions of reality 
      • Delusions - beliefs that are not based in reality 
    • What are the negative symptoms of schizophrenia?
      • speech poverty - a reduction in the quality and amount of speech 
      • Avolition - a lack of desire and motivation for anything 
      • negative symptoms involve the loss of usual abilities and experiences
    • Schizophrenia is a form of psychosis
    • What is psychosis?
      • when some people loose in touch with reality
      • they may hear or see things that aren't there (hallucinations)
      • they may believe things that aren't true (delusions)
    • What is type 1 schizophrenia?
      • an acute type characterised by positive symptoms and better prospects of recovery
    • What is type 2 schizophrenia?
      • A chronic type characterised by negative symptoms and poorer prospects of recovery
    • Negative symptoms are defined as and include:
      • Type 2 schizophrenia
      • Occur in chronic, longer lasting episodes and resistant to medication 
      • Contribute to sufferers not being able to function effectively in society such as in relationships or work
    • How can reliability of diagnosis be tested?
      • test-retest reliability: occurs when clinician makes the same diagnosis on separate occasions from the same information
      • inter-rater reliability: occurs when different clinicians make identical, independent diagnosis of the same patient
    • Research that supports reliability of classification system over time
      • Beck et al 54 % concordance rate between experienced practitioners diagnosis when assessing patients
      • while Soderberg et al reported a concordance rate of 81 % using DSM-5
    • Research evidence against the reliability of diagnosis of schizophrenia
      • Read et al reported test-retest reliability of schizophrenia to only have 37 % concordance rate
      • noted that in a study when British and US psychiatrists provided a diagnosis on the base of a description