schizophrenia

    Subdecks (3)

    Cards (49)

    • schizophrenia symptoms
      1. Hallucinations: perceiving things around us that aren’t real, can involve all 5 senses
      2. Delusions: irrational beliefs about the world maintained despite contradictory evidence
      3. Avolition: lack of motivation and energy to do everyday tasks
      4. Speech Poverty: Lack of spontaneous, unprompted speech + Minimal speech.
    • Positive symptoms
      abnormal, additional experiences people with schizophrenia have e.g. delusions and hallucinations
    • negative symptoms
      absence of experiences that normal people do not usually have e.g. avolition and speech poverty
    • diagnosing schizophrenia
      • schizophrenia is diagnosed with DSM-5
      • patients need to display at least 2 symptoms for 6months
    • inter-rater reliability in schizophrenia 

      Researchers use inter-rater reliability to assess the reliability of a diagnosis of schizophrenia.
      BECK
      1962 diagnosis of schizophrenia = 52% similar
      2005 diagnosis of schizophrenia = 81% similar
      A diagnosis of schizophrenia is becoming more reliable over time.
    • Validity of Schizophrenia Diagnosis: Rosenhan's Study

      Rosenhan got 8 volunteers, who pretended to have schizophrenia, admitted into hospital.
       Rosenhan conducted an observation study.
      Rosenhan tested how long it took doctors to declare that the volunteers were healthy.
      RESULTS-
      it took the doctors between 7 and 52 days to realise the diagnoses were wrong, and that the volunteers were healthy.
      The study showed that the diagnosis of schizophrenia can lack validity.
    • cultural bias: study support
      chochrane conducted view comparing people diagnosed with schizophrenia in Caribbean vs in Britain (around 1% for both)
      People from Caribbean that lived in England however were 7x more likely to be diagnosed with schizophrenia than English person
    • Gender Bias: Study Support
       They gave male and female doctors identical descriptions of a patient’s symptoms.
      gender of patient varied
      RESULTS-
      When the patient was described as female,  20 % of doctors diagnosed the patient with schizophrenia.
      When the patient was described as male,  56 % of doctors diagnosed the patient with schizophrenia.
      This indicates there may be alpha bias in the diagnosis of schizophrenia.