× Didn't find what you were looking for? Ask a question
Top Posters
Since Sunday
7
6
o
5
b
4
s
3
j
3
b
3
s
3
m
3
B
3
K
3
g
3
New Topic  
CCashley CCashley
wrote...
Posts: 353
Rep: 0 0
6 years ago
Sanjay was diagnosed with a neurocognitive disorder. Which of the following could be the specific diagnosis?
 
  a. schizoaffective disorder
  b. traumatic brain injury
 c. mood disorder
 d. psychosis

Question 2

In neurocognitive disorders, ____.
 
  a. social and psychological factors play no role
 b. brain dysfunctions cause problems with thinking processes, memory, consciousness, and perception
  c. there may be symptoms of brain pathology, but no organic cause is assumed
 d. psychological factors cause the brain to malfunction

Question 3

Ali has difficulty speaking. He also experiences memory deficits and issues with making plans and thinking abstractly. Ali suffers from behavioral disturbances that result from damage to the brain, which is technically referred to as a(n) ____.
 
  a. psychosomatic disorder
  b. identity disorder
 c. mood disorder
 d. neurocognitive disorder

Question 4

Describe a comprehensive treatment approach to schizophrenia that would not only be effective but also reduce the risk of relapse.
 
  What will be an ideal response?

Question 5

Identify and discuss the typical course of schizophrenia and its prognosis.
 
  What will be an ideal response?

Question 6

Identify and describe the four symptom categories of schizophrenia.
 
  What will be an ideal response?
Read 108 times
2 Replies

Related Topics

Replies
wrote...
6 years ago
Answer to #1

b

Answer to #2

b

Answer to #3

d

Answer to #4

A comprehensive treatment program would include antipsychotic medications (neuroleptics), psychosocial therapy, and skills training for both the individual and the family. It is quite clear that neuroleptics are effective in reducing symptoms in a large proportion of individuals with schizophrenia. Excessively high doses of these drugs can cause serious side effects and, over long periods of time, the involuntary movements of tardive dyskinesia. For these reasons, a comprehensive treatment approach should monitor drug dosage so that it is at the lowest level while still controlling symptoms.

At the same time, psychosocial therapies should be used to help individuals with schizophrenia gain control of their lives. Milieu therapy in hospital environments provides training in decision making and planning that schizophrenic patients need. Cognitive-behavioral treatments teach necessary coping and social skills. Cognitive-behavioral treatment of schizophrenia often includes the following steps: engagement, assessment, identification of negative beliefs, normalization, collaborative analysis of symptoms, and developing alternative explanations. Mindfulness training teaches patients to let go of angry or fearful responses to psychotic symptoms and let the psychotic symptoms come into consciousness without reacting. This process enhances feelings of self-control and significantly reduces negative emotions. Integrated Psychological Therapy, a highly effective therapy, helps patients identify their cognitive deficits and provides skills to overcome them.

However, since more than half of recovering patients return to live with their parents, treatment must extend to training in family communicationways to reduce expressed emotion. Therapies that provide information to families about the nature of schizophrenia and methods of communicating without expressed emotion have greatly reduced relapse rates. Individuals with schizophrenia also need to learn coping skills so that they can identify and respond appropriately when family members become emotional. In sum, treatment should combine low but effective levels of medication, psychosocial and cognitive-behavior training, and family interventions designed to reduce relapse. Family and social skills training has proved to be more effective in preventing relapse than drug treatment alone.

Answer to #5

The typical course of schizophrenia consists of three phases: prodromal, active, and residual. The prodromal phase includes the onset and buildup of schizophrenic symptoms. During this phase, social withdrawal and isolation, peculiar behaviors, inappropriate affect, poor communication patterns, and neglect of personal grooming may become evident. Often, psychosocial stressors or excessive demands on an individual with schizophrenia in the prodromal phase result in the onset of prominent psychotic symptoms, and the person transitions into the active phase of schizophrenia. In this phase, the person shows full-blown symptoms of schizophrenia, including severe disturbances in thinking, deterioration in social relationships, and flat or markedly inappropriate affect. At some later time, the person may enter the residual phase, in which the symptoms are no longer prominent. In the residual phase, the symptom severity declines, and the individual may show milder impairment similar to that seen in the prodromal phase.

Most people with schizophrenia recover gradually rather than suddenly. Long-term studies have shown that many people with schizophrenia can lead productive lives; however, full recovery is rare. Specifically, research conducted by Harrow et al. (2005) indicated over 40 percent of individuals diagnosed with schizophrenia showed one or more periods of recovery, and a sizable minority was not on any medication. Another study conducted by Wiersma and colleagues (1998) identified 25 percent of individuals diagnosed with schizophrenia in complete remission of symptoms, another 50 percent showed partial remission of symptoms accompanied by either anxiety and depression or negative symptoms, and 11 percent showed no recovery after the initial psychotic episode. Relapses however, also occurred in two-thirds of this sample, after which about one in six showed no remission of symptoms.

Regarding prognosis, there are factors associated with a positive outcome. Being female, married, having a higher premorbid level of functioning, and having a better educational background are associated with better outcomes. Research indicates that baseline predictors associated with recovery from schizophrenia include fewer negative symptoms; a prior history of good work performance and ability to live independently; and lower levels of depression and aggression (Shrivastava, Shah, Johnston, Stitt & Thakar, 2010). Social factors such as peer support/friends, work opportunities, being single or married as opposed to be separated, and reducing the stigma of schizophrenia also play an important role in the recovery process.

Early intervention and reduction of positive symptoms have shown to yield a more favorable course of the illness (Mihalopoulos, Harris, Henry, Harrigan & McGorry, 2009). Interventions to decrease stress from issues such as self-stigmatization, negative beliefs, and social skills deficits can significantly enhance recovery (Tsang et al., 2010).

Answer to #6

The symptoms of schizophrenia fall into four categories: positive symptoms, negative symptoms, cognitive symptoms and psychomotor abnormalities. Positive symptoms involve unusual thoughts or perceptions such as delusions (false beliefs), hallucinations, disordered thinking (i.e., shifting and unrelated ideas producing incoherent communication), and bizarre behavior. These positive symptoms can be influenced by the individual's mood and can intensity with stress.

Negative symptoms are associated with an inability or decreased ability to initiate actions or speech, express emotions, or feel pleasure. Negative symptoms include avolition (an inability to take action or become goal-oriented), alogia (a lack of meaningful speech), asociality (minimal interest in social relationships), and restricted affect (little or no emotion in situations in which strong reactions are expected).

Cognitive symptoms include problems with attention and memory and difficulty developing a plan of action. Individuals with schizophrenia often have severe to moderately severe cognitive impairments, or poor executive functioning.. This includes deficits in the ability to absorb and interpret information and make decisions based on that information; to sustain attention; and to retain and use recently learned information. Cognitive symptoms are often present before the onset of the first psychotic episode and tend to persist even with treatment.

Psychomotor abnormalities are
extremes in activity level (either unusually high or unusually low), peculiar body movements or postures, strange gestures and grimaces, or a combination of these. People with excited catatonia are agitated and hyperactive. They may talk and shout constantly, moving or running until they drop from exhaustion. They sleep little and are continually on the go.. Their behavior can become dangerous and involve violent acts. In sharp contrast, people experiencing withdrawn catatonia are extremely unresponsive with respect to motor activity. They show prolonged periods of stupor, mutism, and maintain strange postures despite their awareness of all that is going on around them.
CCashley Author
wrote...
6 years ago
tremendous help
New Topic      
Explore
Post your homework questions and get free online help from our incredible volunteers
  1023 People Browsing
 112 Signed Up Today
Related Images
  
 361
  
 461
  
 1103
Your Opinion
What percentage of nature vs. nurture dictates human intelligence?
Votes: 436