This German psychiatrist began the psychoanalytic tradition that was pervasive through the first two editions of the DSM.
Who is Sigmund Freud?
Before the DSM, the outbreak of this disease accounted for over 1/5th of admissions into psychiatric hospitals?
What is syphilis?
This organization published the DSM-I.
Who was the American Psychiatric Association?
This is the year that the DSM-II was published.
What is 1968?
This Hippocratic system was used to diagnose people with temperament disorders of black bile, blood, yellow bile, and phlegm.
What are the humors?
This Swiss-American psychiatrist headed the APA and believed in a psychobiological approach that was against diagnosis.
Who is Adolf Meyer?
This is the brand name for the drug meprobamate which was prescribed as a “calming pill” or “happy pill.”
What is Miltown?
The DSM 1 was published in this year
What is 1952?
This controversial diagnosis was included in the class of “sociopathic personality disturbances” and led to a campaign of protests against its inclusion.
What is homosexuality?
After WWII, this manual was developed by Mennigner after the former book failed to properly diagnose war verterans. Its categorizations would utilize life history and social environment. Extra 100 for naming the new categories developed in this manual.
What is the medical 203?
Extra points: What are Personality types, neurosis sub types subcategories—anxiety, dissociative, phobic, conversion, somatization, obsessive compulsive, hypochondriacal, and depressive
This German psychiatrist created the, “Compendium of Psychiatry: For the Use of Students and Physicians” in 1883, a diagnosing system that aimed to turn attention away from the visible symptoms of mental disorders to their course and outcome.
Who is Emil Kraeplin?
This drug was considered a “major tranquilizer” during the 1950s and 1960s.
What is Thorazine?
In the core of its ‘psychotic’ category, this school of thought had a dominant ‘imbalanced’ influence on how to view these disorders.
What are the psychoanalysts?
This term was frequently used in the DSM-I but largely abandoned in the DSM-II.
What is reaction?
This book, published in 1918 but renamed by the APA in 1921, was used to categorize asylum patients as a result of asylums needing to produce records for state funding. Extra 100 points will be granted to groups that can tell what 4 neurosis categories were in this book.
What is this statistical manual for the use of institutions for the insane?
Extra 100: What is neuroaesthetics (neurethenia), anxiety, hysterical, psychasthenic (obsessive comp)?
This American psychiatrist developed a set of standards for military physicians during WWII that developed into Medical 203.
Who is William Menninger?
These 2 benzodiazepines were marketed as the relief for “anxiety and tension” and became the next drug sensation in the 1960s.
What are Librium and Valium?
This was the final section of the DSM 1 that involved 4 subcategories.
What is Transient situational personality disorders (TSPD)?
What group of people had the largest negative reaction to the DSM 2, specifically in its topic of neurosis?
Who are the "analysts"?
This movement in the 1920s-30s promoted ‘good mental health’, outpatient hospitals, child guidance practices, and treatment facilities while contributing to deemphasizing psychiatric classifications.
What is the mental hygiene movement?
This American psychiatrist was a consultant on the DSM-II revision and later would lead the development of the DSM-III.
Who is Robert Spitzer?
Kraeplin referred to this commonly diagnosed disorder as “dementia praecox."
What is schizophrenia?
The psychogenic disorders were divided into these 5 categories.
What are psychotic, psychophysiologic, psychoneurotic, personality, and transient situational personality disorders?
The number of diagnostic disorders included in the DSM II rose from 106 to 186 not because of philosophical changes, but because of the specialization of these 3 categories (name at least one).
What are the intellectual deficiency, alcohol and drug dependence, and behavior disorders among children and adolescents categories?
This late 19th century and late 20th century psychiatry saw a shift in psychiatric classification through psychosomatic presentation in favor of what. Extra points will be rewarded to a group that explain what caused this shift (hint: an illness)
What is the course and outcome of mental disorder?
Extra points answer: What is the outbreak of syphilis?