MMPI 2 Point Codes 13/31, common in medical settings, more often in women, somatization, hypochondraisis, demand sympathy and attention, avoid life responsibilities,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 5: Mental and Emotional Problems
Advertisements

MNA Mosby’s Long Term Care Assistant Chapter 43 Mental Health Problems
Mental Health A better view of mental illness. What are mental disorders?  A _____________________: is an illness of the mind that can affect the thoughts,
Lesson 1 – Mental Disorders
ERIC NI DREW PLAISANCE Anti-Social Personality Disorder.
SSR: READ UNTIL 9:05AM. Entry Slip – 9/17 What does nature vs. nurture mean when it comes to our development and personality? How can this theory play.
Section 9: Personality Disorders. Personality Disorders Inflexible traits that disrupt social life Appear by late adolescence Can’t be distinguished from.
4 th Edition Copyright Prentice Hall12-1 Psychological Disorders Chapter 12.
Female felons in America Based on research by Warren, J., Hurt, S., Loper, A., Bale, R., Friend, R., & Chauhan, P. (2002)
Major Disorders. Mood Disorders Disorders in which individuals experience swings in their emotional states that are extreme and prolonged.
1 Overheads – Abnormal Psychology Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.
{ Mental Health.  The term stigma refers to any attribute, trait or disorder that causes a person to be labeled as unacceptable or different from “normal.
MENTAL HEALTH Understanding Mental Illness. Defining Mental Illness Clinical definition Clinically significant behavioral problems Clinically significant.
Schizoaffective Disorder What is it? How does it affect the person diagnosed? How is it dealt with? What is it? How does it affect the person diagnosed?
Psychological Disorders What Is Abnormal? Schizophrenia Mood Disorders Anxiety Disorders Somatoform and Dissociative Disorders Other Psychological Disorders.
Schizophrenia. Definition Greek for “split brain” Term used to describe a collection of brain disorders that cause the afflicted to interpret reality.
PARANOID SCHIZOPHRENIA By: Kayla McCuen Anna Marsh.
Deliberate Self Harm and Risk Assessment
PERSONALITY DISORDERS Personality Disorders derive from a personality pattern of long standing that seriously impair an individual's ability to function.
TEST REVIEW WHAT TO STUDY… PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDERS & THERAPY.
Chapter 9 Warm-Up What are phobias? List a few of your own phobias.
Working with Mental Illness in an Emergency Shelter Presented by LaTonya Murray.
Personality Disorders. Anti-Social Personality  Their brain operates at a lower level  No Regard for other people  Feel no remorse for their actions.
Mental Health Nursing I NURS 1300 Unit V Mental Health Alterations
Psychological Disorders Chapter 15. Psychological Disorders Mental processes or behavior patterns that cause emotional distress and/or substantial impairment.
Mental and Emotional Problems. Mental Disorders A mental disorder- illness of the mind that can affect the thoughts, feelings, and behaviors of a person,
Schizophrenia and Personality Disorders. Schizophrenia Characterized by disorganized through and delusional thinking, disturbed perceptions, and inappropriate.
Personality Disorders Disorders characterized by inflexible and negative behaviors that impair social functioning. You probably will see aspects of these.
Module 50 Schizophrenia 1. 2 Schizophrenia – break with reality (psychosis) - lifetime prevalence 1% Symptoms Delusions - false beliefs despite clear.
Personality Disorders. Inflexible, maladaptive pattern of thoughts, emotions, behaviors, and interpersonal functioning that are stable over time and across.
Personality Disorders
Mental Health Modern Health review Schizo phrenia Mood Disorders Anxiety Disorders Personality Disorders Eating Disorders & SIB.
Personality Disorders Jacob Alexander BV PRCC. Personality Disorders Personality Disorders refer to long- standing, pervasive and inflexible patterns.
PERSONALITY DISORDERS  A class of psychological disorders characterized by rigid personality traits that impair people’s ability to adjust to the demands.
BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER By: Brenda Vazquez, Doua Xiong, Dominique Yang.
Bell Work What is 1 good listening Technique? 1 point What is a verbal and non-verbal way to respond to anger? 2 points What are the 6 steps in problem.
MMPI-2 Restructured Clinical Scales (RC) Scales William P. Wattles Francis Marion University.
Continuing and Distance Education Introductory Psychology 1023 Lecture 6: Abnormal Psychology Reading: Chapter 14.
Copyright © 2007, 2003 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 36 Mental Health Problems.
Personality Disorders Those written in YELLOW are the ones you’ll need to know for the test.
Schizophrenia and Dissociative Disorders
1. Abnormal Behavior * A psychological disorder, causing distress, disability, or dysfunction. Defined symptomatically by the DSM. 2.
SCHIZOPHRENIA 2 nd most frequent diagnosis of patients y/o.
By Nora Gonzalez Period 5 Schizophrenia. Discussion Question: Define Schizophrenia.
Mental Illness schizophrenia. What is schizophrenia? A chronic, severe, debilitating mental illness that affects about 1% of the population Affects men.
Lundy Bancroft. KEY CONCEPTS There are multiple sources of psychological injury to children from exposure to men who batter. Professional responses need.
Personality Disorders
Suicide, the Isolated Killer By Elizabeth Azubuike and Joshualee Vivar.
Safety and Injury Prevention.  Child Abuse - maltreatment of a child under the age of 18; can be physical, emotional, neglect or sexual abuse  Physical.
By David Gallegos Period 7.  What are the Causes and Symptoms of Schizophrenia ?  How do people who have Schizophrenia live with it and how is it treated?
Personality Disorders Affect the entire life adjustment of a person- not simply one aspect.
What are they and how many people are affected? What are they? Behavior patterns or mental processes that cause serious personal suffering or interfere.
Personality Disorders
Mental Disorders.
Abnormal Psychology Disorders according to data in the DSM IV (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, 4 th revision)
Psychopathology Psychopaths & Psychotics. Personality Disorders Class of disorders marked by personality traits that cause subjective distress or impair.
OT 460A. Transition, learning and growth Physical, emotional, and social changes Movement in and out of new and old roles Dichotomy: Need to learn to.
Personality disorders. What is it? Personality Complex pattern of characteristics, largely outside of the person’s awareness Complex pattern of characteristics,
Personality Disorders “..love of self, in contrast to love of humanity…”
Introduction to Human Services Dawn Burgess, Ed. D.
Depression and Suicide All Rights reserved Austin Community College.
Personality Disorders By: Allyssa Tamblingson. What is personality?  Personality is a term psychologists use to define the unique attitudes, behaviors,
Ch. 18 Section 7: Personality Disorders
Module 50 Schizophrenia.
Personality Disorders
A better view of mental illness
Personality Disorders 1
Psychotic Disorders.
Personality Disorders
Presentation transcript:

MMPI 2 Point Codes 13/31, common in medical settings, more often in women, somatization, hypochondraisis, demand sympathy and attention, avoid life responsibilities, immature, extroverted, histrionic P.D. 14/41: more common in men, pessimistic, demanding, indecisive, poor personal relationships, may use medical symptoms manipulatively, abuse prescription meds

2 18/81: Very maladjusted, have bizarre somatic complaints/delusions, Poor work history, feel alienated, may have angry outbursts. Confusion, flat affect, thought disorder common. Seen in suicidal CMI substance abusers 23/32: Immature, dependent, histrionic, view selves as self-sacrificing martyrs. Self-blaming during stress, sexual dysfunction, chronically unhappy. Sexual and marital problems are common

3 24/42: Antisocial depression, may appear more psychopathic during times of stress. Low guilt, feel remorse only for getting caught. May make good 1st impression, but generally have relationship problems. Common in offender populations, bulimic women, APD, BPD 26/62: Moody, paranoid, overly sensitive to criticism, view others as unreasonable. PPD common diagnosis.

5 27/72: Common anxiety/depression mixture. May be OCPD, or have genuine OCD traits, phobias common, GAD, DPD 28/82 Common in CMI, (particularly if t>80) Schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, suicidal ideation is a concern. 29/92 Agitated and depressed, narcissistic and explosive, bipolar disorder and NPD, also brain damage

5 34/43: common (at low t levels) in child custody cases, associated with spurious claims, dramatic, emotional, express anger through litigation, back-stabbing, etc. HPD, PAPD, APD common diagnoses. 43 version associated with violent outburst, seen in manslaughter and assault perpetrators 48/84: see world as threatening, highly alienated, immature, multiple maladjustments, sexual dysfunction/paraphilia, sexual promiscuity/ambiguity. Common in sexual offenders, rapists, child molesters. Suicidal ideation is a concern. Personality disorders mixed with schizophrenia

6 49/94. common offender profile. Rebellious, low guilty, poor learning from punishment, May appear friendly/extroverted at 1st. Offenders often commit violent offenses. APD and NPD common. 68/86: CMI, paranoid schizophrenia, Confused, maladjusted, disorganized. Appear shy, avoidant, introverted, bizarre delusions, hallucinations.

Some 3-Point codes Used if 3 elevation over 65 (but no others) 123: Somatoform disorder, HPD. Use physical symptoms to withdraw from life responsibilities. Expect others to care for them. Feel others do not understand them. Generally appear socially conforming but manipulate and control others. On surface appear as “good people”…others may not understand why their family complains about them. Bulimia and sexual dysfunction are common.

2 246: Seen in paranoid PD, feel as if people are generally hostile, need to protect selves. Argumentative, pessimistic, difficult relationships. May been seen as hard if asocial workers. Insecure, but poor insight, focused on own needs in relationships, feel rejected and threatened by those they seek relationships with.

3 249: Depressed psychopath, usually variety of legal, social, relationship problems that they blame others as being responsible for. View world as hostile, themselves as victims. If “2” is very high (t>80) may be greater risk for domestic violence, murder/suicide.

4 678: Common in paranoid schizophrenia. Confused, bizarre delusions, hallucinations, flat or hostile affect, May engage in violent/assault behavior motivated by delusions. Feel others are controlling them, trying to harm them. Common code in forensic hospitals, and among women with a history of sexual abuse.

Scoring Things to remember: Line black rectangles on scoring template up with rectangles on answer sheet. Count number of unanswered. Make sure you use appropriate male or female scoring sheet. Make sure you use appropriate (male or female) 5-scale template