Interactionist Approach to Schizophrenia

Cards (11)

  • The Interactionist Approach to Schizophrenia
    - acknowledges the biological, psychological and social factors of schizophrenia

    - e.g. genetic vulnerability, stress, interactions in the family
  • Diathesis-Stress Model of Schizophrenia
    - diathesis = vulnerability

    - stress = negative experience

    - both a vulnerability to schizophrenia and a stress-trigger are needed to develop the disorder

    - one or more underlying factors may make a person vulnerable to schizophrenia but the onset of the condition is triggered by stress
  • Meehl's Model of Schizophrenia (1962)

    - diathesis was entirely genetic caused by a single 'schizogene'

    - this led to a schizotypic personality characterised by sensitivity to stress

    - this is what causes schizophrenia; if a person doesn't have this gene no amount of stress can cause schizophrenia

    - if carriers of the gene experience chronic stress throughout childhood and adolescence (particularly a schizophrenogenic mother) can cause the disorder
  • Modern Understanding of Diathesis
    - it has now been shown that schizophrenia is polygenic and is caused by no one gene (Ripke et al, 2014)

    - each gene only appears to increase genetic vulnerability slightly

    - psychological trauma is also viewed as a diathesis as well as a stressor

    - (Read, 2001) proposed a neurodevelopmental model in which early trauma alters the developing brain

    - e.g. trauma like child abuse can make the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) overactive making a person more vulnerable to stress
  • Modern Understanding of Stress
    - the modern definition is no longer just psychological in nature but now includes anything that risks triggering stress (Houston et al, 2008)

    - cannabis use has been implicated in causing schizophrenic episodes

    - cannabis is a stressor because it increases the risk of schizophrenia up to 7x according to dose

    - this may be because cannabis interferes with the dopamine system

    - however most people don' t develop schizophrenia after taking cannabis because they don't have the vulnerability factors
  • Treatment According to the interactionist Model
    - as the model acknowledges biological and psychological factors it combines both types of treatment

    - the model is associated with combing anti-psychotic drugs and psychological therapies e.g. CBT

    - in Britain it is increasingly standard practice to use a combination of antipsychotic drugs and CBT

    - in the US there is more conflict between the biological and psychological models of schizophrenia which has led to a slower adoption of the interactionist model

    - this means that drug treatment without psychological therapy is more common in the US
  • Support for Vulnerability: Strength
    - (Tienari et al, 2004) investigated the impact of both genetic vulnerability and a psychological trigger (dysfunctional parenting)

    - 19,000 Finnish children whose biological mother shad schizophrenia were monitored

    - the genetic risk group was compared to the control group of adoptees who didn't have a family history of schizophrenia

    - adoptive parents were assessed for child-rearing style and it was found that high levels of criticism, hostility and low levels of empathy were associated with the development of schizophrenia
  • Diathesis & Stress are Complex: Limitation
    - the original diathesis-stress model is oversimplified

    - multiple genes in multiple combinations influence diathesis and stress comes in many forms, including but not limited to dysfunctional parenting

    - diathesis can also be influenced by psychological factors and stress can be biological as well as psychological

    - (Houston et al, 2008) found child sexual abuse as a major influence on underlying vulnerability and cannabis was the major trigger

    - this means multiple factors affect diathesis and stress , supporting the modern model
  • Real-World Application: Strength
    - an application of acknowledging both biological and psychological factors in schizophrenia has been combining drug and psychological therapy

    - studies have shown that using both enhances their effectiveness

    - (Tarrier al, 2004) randomly allocated 315 participants to either:
    . medication & CBT
    . medication & counselling
    . control group (medication only)

    - participants in the 2 combination groups showed lower symptoms than the medication only group following the trial

    - this means there is a clear practical advantage to adopting an interactionist approach to schizophrenia
  • Real-World Application: Counterpoint
    - (Jarvis & Okami, 2019) point of saying successful treatment for a mental disorder justifies a particular treatment is the logical equivalent of saying because alcohol reduces shyness, shyness is caused by lack of alcohol

    - this logical error is called the treatment-causation fallacy

    - we cannot automatically assume the success of combined therapies means interactionist explanations are correct
  • Urbanisation: Evaluation Extra
    - schizophrenia is more commonly diagnosed in urban rather than rural areas

    - this supports the interactionist position as it assumes that urban living is more stressful than rural, therefore city living acts a trigger

    - however it may simply be that schizophrenia is more likely to be diagnosed in cities

    - or people with diathesis for schizophrenia (e.g. teenagers abused as children) tend to migrate to cities