Psychological disorder is a psychological dysfunction within an individual associated withdistress or impairment in functioning and a response that is not typical or culturally expected
Psychological dysfunction refers to a breakdown in cognitive, emotional, or behavioral functioning
Distress or impairment means the individual is extremely upset and cannot function properly
Atypical or not culturally expected behavior deviates from the average or the norm of the culture
Psychopathology is the scientific study of psychological disorders
Clinical/Counseling Psychologists receive a Ph.D. and follow a course of graduate-level study lasting approximately 5 years
Psy.D. focuses on clinical training and de-emphasizes or eliminates research training
Ph.D. integrates clinical and research training
Psychiatrists first earn an M.D. in med school, then specialize in Psychiatry
Psychiatric Social Workers earn a master’s in social work as they develop expertise in collecting information relevant to the social and family situation of the individual
Scientist-Practitioners keep up with the latest scientific developments in their field and utilize the knowledge in their practice
They evaluate their own assessments and treatment procedures to see whether they are effective
They conduct research that produces new information about disorders or their treatments
Presenting Problem or Present is a traditional shorthand way of indicating why the person came to the clinic
Clinical Description represents the unique combination of behaviors, thoughts, and feelings that make up a specific disorder
Clinical refers both to the types of problems or disorders that you would find in a clinic or hospital and to the activities connected with assessment and treatment
Prevalence indicates how many people in the population as a whole have/had the disorder
Incidence refers to how many new cases occur during a given period
Course is the individual pattern of symptoms
Chronic disorders last a long time
Episodic disorders are likely to recover for a few months only to suffer re-occurrence
Time-Limited disorders will improve without treatment in a relatively short period with little or no risk of recurrence
Onset refers to the beginning of the disorder
Acute onset is sudden
Insidious onset is gradual over an extended period of time
Prognosis is the anticipated course of the disorder
Etiology is the study of origins, why the disorder begins
Ego-Syntonic behaviors are aligned with your personal values and self-image
Ego-Dystonic actions are inconsistent with your ego
History: Supernatural beliefs during the last quarter of the 14th century
Roman Catholic Church fought back against evil believed to be behind psychological disorders
People turned to magic and sorcery to solve their problems, attributing psych disorders to the devil and witches
Common treatments included exorcisms, shaving the pattern of a cross in the hair of the victim’s head, and securing sufferers to a wall near the church
Mental depression and anxiety were recognized as illnesses, although symptoms such as despair and lethargy were often identified by the church as a sin of acedia, or sloth
Nicholas Oresme suggested that melancholy (depression) was the source of some bizarre behavior, rather than demons
Possession is not always connected with sin but may be seen as involuntary, and the possessed individuals as blameless
In the middle ages, if exorcism failed, some authorities resorted to confinement, beatings, and other forms of torture as treatment
Mass Hysteria involved whole groups of people compelled to run out in the streets, dance, shout, rave, and jump around in patterns
Paracelsus rejected the notions of possession and suggested that the movement of the moon and stars had profound effects on people’s psychological functioning
Johann Weyer was the founder of modern psychiatry and used compassion and a pioneering approach in treating mental illness during the time of witchcraft