one in four British adults report having been diagnosed with a mental health disorder
the number of mental health problems tends to decline with age
women tend to be diagnosed with mental health problems more than men
people who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender are particularly at risk of experiencing mental health problems
stigma - a strong feeling of disapproval about something discrimination - treating an individual or group differently from others
incidence - a measure of the number of new cases of a particular disorder over a given time period
prevalence - a measure of the proportion of the population that experience a particular disorder at any one point in time
since the 1959 Mental Health Act, there have been steady changes in society's attitudes towards mental health problems
the Act itself removed some of the stigma around people seen as 'lunatics' or 'insane' by using the term 'mental disorder'
it also aimed to make sure that patients were treated with the same respect and rights as patients with physical illnesses as well as initiating the idea of community care
recent surveys show that the public have a better understanding of mental health problems, and are more tolerant and less judgemental about people who experience them
Key statistics of schizophrenia:
prevalent in approximately 1 per cent in the population
only diagnosed in adults; men, normally in their 20s; women, normally in their 30s
diagnosed equally in females and males
diagnosed more in people of Caribbean or African origin compared to people who are white
leads to hospitalisation in about 15 per cent of cases, while 25 per cent of patients fully recover from the disorder
Clinical characteristics of schizophrenia:
thought disturbances
delusions of control
hallucinatory voices
persistent delusions
persistent hallucinations
disorganised speech
catatonic behaviour
negative symptoms
delusions - false beliefs
hallucinations - experiences in which you see, hear, feel, taste or smell something that does not exist
catatonic behaviour - behaviour ranging from repetitive, frenzied actions to statue-like stupor
negative symptoms - symptoms that include loss of normal function, such as social withdrawal, apathy or lack of emotion
neurological - relating to the brain
Biological explanation of schizophrenia: Dopamine Hypothesis
people with schizophrenia have an overactive dopamine system which causes high dopamine levels
dopamine is a neurotransmitter associated with mood, perception and movement
brain scans have shown that people with schizophrenia have dopaminergic neurons that fire too easily or too frequently causing excess dopamine travelling across synapses
they also have an excess of dopamine receptors which results in more dopamine binding
Biological explanation: Faulty brain structures
blames schizophrenia on brain dysfunction
neurological damage happens as a result of either defective genes or problems during pregnancy when the foetus's brain is developing
as the individual matures, the damage causes the symptoms of schizophrenia to develop
neurological research on people with schizophrenia include the following findings:
volume of their brain is around 5 per cent lower than the average brain
the frontal lobes are less active due to decreased blood flow
the temporal lobes lack grey matter
the hippocampus is smaller than average
grey matter - the darker tissue of the brain; contains 'thinking' cells
hippocampus - part of the brain mainly associated with the formation of memories and the emotions that go with them
Biological explanations of schizophrenia: Criticisms
focuses too much on nature and ignores the role of nurture. even if biology is responsible for the symptoms, how society responds to them also has an effect
problems establishing cause and effect. is brain dysfunction the cause of schizophrenia or just another symptom of it?
too reductionist as schizophrenia refers to a set of highly complex behaviours and it seems too simple to explain this in terms of parts of the brain just not working properly
Psychological explanation: Social Drift Theory
suggests that once people have schizophrenia they begin to drift or move down the social scale so that they end up at the bottom of society
individuals disengage with society once they have schizophrenia because the things that are most important to people become less important to someone who is experiencing lots of terrible symptoms
individuals are rejected by society meaning they may lose jobs or not find it easy to get a job
society may also reject them as their behaviour is not normal so they become socially excluded
Psychological explanation of schizophrenia: Criticisms
problems with establishing cause and effect even though schizophrenia and social class are linked. rather than the disorder effecting social class, it may be that being in a lower class leads to schizophrenia
people of a lower class may be more likely to be diagnosed with schizophrenia than more affluent people. this is because of a bias in diagnosis among middle class psychiatrists
focuses too much on wider society and ignores the role that family environment may have in the development of schizophrenia
Daniel's study:
aim - to investigate the activity in the prefrontal cortices of people with schizophrenia
sample - ten in-patients from mental health research wards in USA
IV - whether participants had been given amphetamine or not
DV - how they performed on a cognitive task
repeated measures design
Daniel's study: results
significant differences between the two conditions when participants where doing the cognitive task but not when they were doing the sensori-motor task
amphetamine significantly increased prefrontal cortex activity during performance of the cognitive task despite it reducing blood flow in the brain
supported the idea that dopamine plays a part in modulating an enhancing cortical activity - as amphetamine stimulates dopamine activity
Daniel's study: criticisms
sample size was too small to be representative
the task that the participants did was too artificial to relate to real life
the drug used to stabilise symptoms may have been an extraneous variable
findings can be seen as outdated as schizophrenia is being diagnosed differently nowadays
ethical concerns about using scanning equipment for research purposes alone as it is potentially dangerous
Key statistics of clinical depression:
prevalent in approximately 25 per cent of the population each year
most common amongst 18-30 year olds and least common in under 18s
approximately twice as many females are diagnosed compared to males
people of Indian and Pakistani/Bangladeshi origins report experiencing depression more than people of the Caribbean and African origin
although the vast majority of people recover, about 50 per cent will go on to have a second episode, and about 80 per cent of those will have a third
Clinical characteristics of clinical depression:
depressed mood
disturbed sleep
diminished appetite
reduced energy
reduced concentration/attention
reduced self-esteem
loss of interest and enjoyment
bleak and pessimistic views of the future
ideas of guilt and unworthiness
ideas or acts of self-harm
Biological explanation: Social Rank Theory
evolutionary theory state that all adaptive behaviours have a survival value
social rank theory relates to this idea by stating that depression has an evolutionary function
if we experience loss then a natural reaction is to feel depressed, less motivated and more self-contained
by not fighting back, an individual is accepting they are of a lower rank
it allows them to keep their place in a social group, community or society
being part of a group and having people around us is important for survival
Biological explanation of clinical depression: criticisms
too reductionist as it takes something as complex as clinical depression and tries to simplify it down to an instinctive reaction to losing something. other psychologists take a more holistic approach
depression is not limited to people of lower social ranks. there are many successful people who have experienced clinical depression
severe depression can lead to suicide attempts and suicide itself which clearly goes against the idea that depression is a mechanism for survival
Psychological explanation: ABC Model
depression begins with irrational beliefs
A = activating event - situation which can trigger an individual to have an irrational thought
B = beliefs - can be rational or irrational
C = consequence
if beliefs are irrational then the person is more likely to feel hopeless and down, leading to symptoms of depression
Psychological explanation of clinical depression:
the model assumes that people have control over their beliefs as it believes in the idea of free will. other psychologists suggests that this makes the theory over-optimistic
doesn't really explain the type of depression that seems to 'come out of nowhere' without any obvious activating event. this kind of depression may be more biologically driven
problems with cause and effect. do irrational beliefs actually cause depression or are they symptoms of it instead?
Tandoc's study:
aim - to see whether depression was linked to Facebook usage, and whether using Facebook led to feelings of envy
method was a questionnaire conducted online
sample - 736 students from an American university (average age - 19)
self-selecting sample
Hypotheses:
Facebook users would report higher levels of envy
the higher the network of friends, the greater the feeling of envy
higher levels of envy would be associated with more symptoms of depression
Tandoc's study: results
heavy FB users did report higher levels of envy than light users
size of the network was not related to levels of envy
FB envy was a significant predictor of depression
no relationship between how frequently FB was used and how depressed people felt
FB surveillance did not predict depression either
overall conclusion - FB usage does directly relate to depression but is indirectly linked by causing envy
Tandoc's study: criticisms
culturally biased as they were all from USA and journalism students
survey was online - may bias the findings
may have been socially desirable bias where participants underplayed their use of social media, level of envy and their experience of depression, giving invalid results
may lack construct validity as complex behaviours were reduced to numbers and this may not give a true representation of people's experiences
difficulties establishing cause and effect. where there were relationships between variables, we cannot be sure of the cause.
Use of anti-psychotics to treat schizophrenia:
anti-psychotics are a type of drug treatment
they improve mental health mainly by reducing symptoms
the chemicals in anti-psychotic drugs block some of the receptors in the brain
when a neuron send too much dopamine across a synapse, the blocking means that not all of it is received by the next neuron
this reduces the number of messages being sent through the brain
Use of anti-depressants to treat clinical depression:
anti-depressants are a type of drug treatment
they improve mental health by raising people's mood
the chemicals in anti-depressants increases the amount of serotonin and noradrenaline in the brain
for example, one type of anti-depressant prevents serotonin being reabsorbed by blocking the neurons that released it
this means more serotonin remains in the synapses and this lifts the mood
Use of psychotherapy:
psychotherapy focuses on the psychological explanations for neutral health rather than looking at biological factors
all types of psychotherapy involve talking to the individual with a mental health problem and aim to improve mental health by changing the way that people think and behave
Psychotherapy for schizophrenia:
example - psychoanalysis
involve the uncovering of childhood traumas that may have led to schizophrenia developing in childhood
these traumas are often based on conflicts with parents that have not been resolved and so end up buried in the unconscious part of the mind
psychoanalysis aims to improve mental health by discovering these conflicts and resolving them in therapy
past conflicts can be discovered through techniques such as analysing dreams and hypnosis
Psychotherapy for clinical depression:
example - counselling
involves the clients recognising their own problems and deciding how to address them themselves
counsellors do not direct their clients' thinking and do not give advice
the idea is that those who are suffering from depression know themselves best, and they will come up with their own solutions for improving their mental health
often involves clients improving their self-esteem by having a better view of themselves and being realistic about their expectations
Neuropsychological tests:
standardised tests that give scores that show how well a brain is functioning
the scores of people with mental health problems can be compared to the scores of people without, whose brain is functioning
Examples:
Wisconsin Card Sorting test - cognitive ability test that checks the function of the frontal lobe in people with schizophrenia
Beck Depression Inventory - measures the severity of depressive symptoms through multiple-choice questions
Brain imaging techniques:
brain scans allow neuropsychologists to produce images of the brain so that brain structure and function can be seen
the brains of people with mental health problems can be compared with those without
Examples:
PET scans have been used to show that the brains of people with schizophrenia have larger ventricles than normal
fMRI scans have been used to measure the strength of connections between neural circuits in the brain to show there are different types of depression
PET scans: position emission tomography scan - radioactive glucose is injected into the bloodstream and then traced by scanning the brain to show where neurons are firing
fMRI scans: functional magnetic resonance imaging scan - magnetic resonance is used to detect changes in blood flow in the brain