Anxiety disorders
Obsessive-Compulsive
Somatic /dissociative
Mood disorders
Suicide
100

People with this type of anxiety disorder may develop agoraphobia

Panic disorder

100

Obsessions vs compulsions

Obsessions: intrusive, nonsensical thoughts, images or urges

Compulsions: thoughts or actions to suppress obsessions for relief

100

Two causes of somatic symptom disorders

ŸConsistent overreaction to physical signs and sensations

ŸFamily influence

ŸStressful life events

ŸIllness in family during childhood

ŸBenefits of illness (e.g., sympathy, attention)

100

The depressive cognitive triad

Thinking negatively about oneself, world, and future

100

This age range and this ethnicity has the highest suicide rates

45-54 yrs of age

Caucasians

200

Two causes of anxiety disorders

biological vulnerability (inherited tendency to be anxious)

generalized psychological vulnerability (events are uncontrollable)

specific psychological vulnerability (physical sensations are dangerous)

200

Thought-action fusion

equating having a thought with the specific outcome/action associated with that thought (e.g., if I imagine my spouse dying, it means he’s going to die.)

200

somatic symptom vs illness anxiety disorder

Somatic symptom - excessive thoughts, feelings, and behaviors related to symptoms; onset in adolescence

Illness anxiety - anxiety about having or acquiring a serious disease; late age of onset

200

Major depressive vs manic vs hypomanic episodes

ŸMajor depressive episodes: depressive mood

ŸManic episodes: severely elevated mood

ŸHypomanic episodes: less severe elevated mood

200

The most common method of death by suicide

firearms

300

Two symptoms of GAD

Physical symptoms (muscle tension, irritability)

Worry about minor everyday concerns

persists for 6 months or more

300

Exposure and ritual prevention

exposure to cues that would trigger obsessions, with prevention of compensatory compulsions. Example: Patient with fears about contamination who washes her hands compulsively has to touch every doorknob in her house and then make dinner without washing her hands. Or the faucets may be removed from the house to discourage washing the client soon learns that no harm is done whether the rituals are carried out or not.

300

depersonalization vs. derealization vs dissociative fugue

ŸDepersonalization – distortion in perception of one’s body or experience (e.g., feeling like your own body isn’t real)

ŸDerealization – losing a sense of the external world (e.g., sense of living in a dream)

Dissociative fugue: During an amnestic episode, person travels or wanders, sometimes assuming a new identity in a different place

300

MDD VS PDD

MDD: One or more major depressive episodes separated by periods of remission (at least 2 months); Recurrent episodes – more common; ŸMedian duration of MDD: 4-5 months

PDD: Less severe symptoms; lasts for at least 2 years; no more than 2 months of remission

300

Two gender differences in suicide

males complete more suicide; females attempt more suicides

males use more lethal methods than females

400

Two drugs and two therapy-based approaches for anxiety disorders

Benzodiazepines

SSRIs or antidepressants

CBT

IPT

Exposure

400

1 difference and 1 similarity between hoarding disorder and OCD

Both include obsessions; equal male to female ratio

OCD tends to wax and wane whereas, hoarding disorder gets worse over time

hoarding disorder can begin early in life

400

two treatment approaches to somatic symptom disorders


Cognitive behavior therapy

"gatekeeper" physician

detailed education

reassurance by physician

reducing supportive consequences of illness


400

Name and describe any 3 specifiers that can be applied to MDD and PDD

atypical

catatonic

mixed

melancholic

peripartum

seasonal patterns

psychotic

anxious distress

400

three risk factors for suicide

Suicide in the family 

Low serotonin levels

Preexisting psychological disorder

Alcohol use and abuse

Stressful life event, especially humiliation

Past suicidal behavior

Plan and access to lethal methods

500

2 symptoms and 2 treatment approaches for PTSD

Ÿsymptoms:

emotional numbing, avoidance, reckless behavior, interpersonal problems, nightmares, flashbacks

Psychoanalytic therapy: catharsis  = reliving emotional trauma to relieve suffering

ŸCognitive-behavioral treatment

ŸMedications

SSRIs: lower heightened anxiety and panic attacks

500

clinical description and treatment of BDD

ŸA preoccupation with some imagined defect in appearance

Two treatments

ŸSSRIs

ŸExposure and response prevention

500

Factitious disorders vs. factitious disorders imposed on another vs. malingering

ŸFactitious: Purposely faking physical symptoms; May actually induce physical symptoms or just pretend to have them; No obvious external gains; Only external gain may be benefit of “sick role” (e.g., sympathy)

Factitious imposed on another: Inducing symptoms in another person;Typically a caregiver induces symptoms in a dependent (e.g. child) to receive attention, pity)

Malingering:physical symptoms are faked for the purpose of achieving a concrete objective (e.g., getting paid time off, avoiding military service)

500

2 medications and 2 forms of therapy for mood disorders

SSRIs, tricyclics, monoamine oxidase inhibitors, mixed reuptake inhibitors, lithium (bipolar)

ECT, TMS, CBT, Interpersonal psychotherapy, family therapy

500

suicide prevention strategies by mental health professionals

no-suicide contracts

developing a safety plan

risk assessments

removing access to lethal methods

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