affective mood disorder, involves the disturbance to emotions
affects about 20-25% of people
affects all ages, increasingly affecting younger people
woman twice as likely to be diagnosed
often occurs in cycles
atleast 5 symptoms must be apparent every day for 2 weeks in order to be diagnosed. must be impairing functioning and not attributable to any other medical conditions or events
symptoms of depression
major depression --> have atleast 5 of the symptoms
minor depression --> have less than 5 symptoms
decreased pleasure in normal activities
difficulty sleeping
weight loss or gain
feelings of guilt or worthlessness
low energy levels
change in activity levels (thinking or moving slow)
difficulty making decisions or concentrating
suicidal thoughts
unipolar (standard - one extreme)
major depression, occurs without mania and manic episodes. up to 25% of women and 12 % of men will suffer it
unipolar (standard - one extreme) - symptoms
behavioural:
loss of energy
social impairment
weight changes
poor personal hygiene
sleep patterns disturbed
emotional:
loss of enthusiasm
constant depressed mood
worthlessness
cognitive:
delusions
hallucinations
reduced concentration
thoughts of death
poor memory
bipolar (two extremes)
about 2% suffering, usually appears in peoples 20s
mixed mania and depression are more common than mania alone
bipolar (two extremes) - symptoms
in addition to unipolar, sufferers have alternating manic episodes
behavioural:
high energy levels
reckless behaviour
talkative
emotional:
elevated mood
anger/irritability
lack of guilt
low self esteem
cognitive:
delusions
irrational thought process
dwelling on negative thoughts
black and white thinking (extremes)
cognitive explanation
main assumption is that depression is due to faulty, irrational, thought processing
forms of faulty thinking:
maximisation and minimisation
overgeneralising
catastrophising
polarised thinking
arbitrary inference
selective abstraction
becks cognitive triad
suggests depression is the result of holding negative schema about the world, the self and the future
sufferers get caught in a loop or cycle of negative thinking, each thought reinforcing the next
suggests these beliefs stem from childhood
example:
the self: 'im undesirable'
the world: 'i understand why everybody hates me, everyone else is so much better'
the future: 'things will never change for me'
pessimistic views become self-fulfilling prophecy and lead to cognitive bias
interacts with negative schemas and cognitive bias to produce depressive thinking
becks cognitive triad
cognitive bias: distortions of thought processes
schemas: can be seen as deeply held beliefs that have their origins primarily in childhood
beck believed depression prone individuals develop a negative self-schema
negative schemas may influence how a person interprets events and experiences in their life
negative schemas and cognitive biases maintain the negative triad
becks cognitive triad - research
lewinsohn et al
measured negative thinking in non-depressed adolescents. one year later, events in life assessed and also whether they had depression
showed those who had experienced many negative life events had an increased likelihood of developing depression, only if they were initially high in negative attitudes
supports theory that negative beliefs are a risk factor for developing depression when exposed to stressful life events
ellis' ABC model
focuses on irrational beliefs at the source of depression
A= activating event
B= belief
C= consequence
mustabatory thinking: certain ideas or assumptions 'must' be true in order to be happy
ellis' ABC model - beevers et al (aim)
aim:
see if there is a difference between the activation of different parts of the brain and depression.
also, whether neural mechanisms can show the degree of vulnerability an individual has for depression
ellis' ABC model - beevers et al (procedure)
procedure:
27 females (18-27) responded to advertisements
depression in Ps measured through a scale
12 Ps placed low in depression, 14 in high
showed Ps different facial expressions and shapes on screen, had to press a button each time they came up to indicate what stimulus it was
timed how long it took
simultaneously scanned brains with an FMRI (detects changes in blood, in brain)
ellis' ABC model - beevers et al (findings)
findings:
different brain activation was recorded between low and high depression groups, when presented with sad or happy faces
ellis' ABC model - beevers et al (conclusions)
conclusions:
those with mild to moderate depression have difficulty activating brain areas associated with cognitive control of emotional info, and parietal brain regions
ellis' ABC model - beevers et al (evaluation)
evaluation:
gender specific - only females tested
limited age range
didnt take into account hormone levels - may have effected findings
cognitive explanation - research
mcintosh and fischer:
tested negative triad to see if it does contain 3 distinct types of negative thoughts, found no clear separation
boury:
monitored students negative thoughts with beck depression inventory, finding depressive misinterpret facts and experiences in a negative fashion and feel hopeless about the future
supports becks cognitive explanation
saisto:
expectant mothers, those who didnt adjust personal goal to match specific demands of the transition of motherhood, had increased dedpressive symptoms
supporting becks theory
cognitive explanation - evaluation
pros:
scientific explanation: lots of reliable lab experiments. do brain scans to identify where in the brain the faulty thinking is occurring
takes into nature and nurture: nature - faults in the brain that may cause faulty thinking. nurture - life experiences
not as reductionist as some explanations, as takes a number of factors into account
CBT is often used to treat it and is very effective
cons:
deterministic: example of soft determinism. controlled by our faulty schemas. CBT can change these
CBT aims to change the way a client thinks - will lead to a change in behaviour as a response to new thinking patterns
cognitive therapies - CBT
most therapists draw on both ellis's and becks models:
focuses on challenging the negative thoughts about oneself, the world and the future. thoughts can be directly challenged and the client is encouraged to test the reality of their negative beliefs
focuses on: affect - how client feels, behaviour - how they act, cognition - how they think
not an easy option: can be expensive and time consuming. patient must be motivated and really want to change. relies on a good relationship being formed between the client and therapist
cognitive therapies - REBT (D)
this model is an extension of ellis' ABC model which is used to explain depression
cognitive therapies - REBT
D= disputing (encourages the client to think of alternative explanations or possibilities)
E= effects (of new beliefs and attitudes that emerge)
F= feelings (emotional responses that arise)
cognitive therapies
both have homework tasks which may involve putting themselves into situations which they would have previously avoided or telling a family member or friend how they really feel
behaviour activation: client is encouraged to become more active and take part in pleasurable activities
ellis strongly believed in the importance of unconditional positive regard
CBT - evaluation
motivation:
patients with severe depression may not engage with CBT. this treatment will be ineffective in treating these patients
CBT cannot be used as the sole treatment for severely depressed patients
some psychologists have criticised CBT, as it suggests that a persons irrational thinking is the primary cause of their depression and CBT does not take into account other factors
elkin et al - procedure
procedure:
across several treatment centres. 240 Ps with depression were treated with CBT, psychotherapy or anti-depressant drugs
elkin et al - findings
findings:
large placebo effect of 35-40%, all therapies were significantly more effective than placebo, and overall had similar levels of effectiveness
drugs tended to be the most effective therapy for severe depression
individual therapist was a significant factor in the effectiveness of psychotherapy
across all treatment groups, 30-40% of patients did not respond to therapy. no treatment is ever 100% effective
elkin et al - conclusion
conclusion:
drugs, CBT and psychotherapy are all more effective than a placebo
march et al
found CBT was as effective as antidepressants
examined 327 adolescents with depression and looked at the effectiveness of CBT, antidepressants and a combination of CBT plus antidepressants
after 36 weeks, 81% of antidepressant group and 81% of CBT group had significantly improved
86% of CBT plus antidepressants group had significantly improved
suggests that a combination of both treatments may be more effective