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AFFECTIVE DISORDERS– CONTINUED Perez | LPA | February 23.

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Presentation on theme: "AFFECTIVE DISORDERS– CONTINUED Perez | LPA | February 23."— Presentation transcript:

1 AFFECTIVE DISORDERS– CONTINUED Perez | LPA | February 23

2 Sociocultural level of analysis: Social and Cultural Factors in depression Brown and Harris (1978): Social Origins of Depression– Conducted with women, found 29 of 32 women make depressed when a severe life event occurred. Life events that resemble previous experiences are more likely to lead to depression. Life events that are considered “severe,” according to Brown and Harris: –Lacking employment away from home. –Absence of social support –Having several young children at home –Loss of mother at an early age –History of childhood abuse

3 Sociocultural level of analysis: Social and Cultural Factors in depression Diathesis-Stress Model: Interactionist approach to explaining psychological disorders. Claims that depression may be the result of a hereditary predisposition. WHO looked into cultural symptomology: –Sad –Affect –Loss of enjoyment –Anxiety –Tension –Lack of energy –Loss of interest –Inability to concentrate –Ideas of insufficiency, inadequateness, and worthlessness. Common symptoms across Iran, Japan, Canada, and Switzerland.

4 Sociocultural level of analysis: Social and Cultural Factors in depression Kleinman: Somatization is a typical form of expression in China  the bodily symptoms of psychological dysfunction are impossible to compare cross-culturally because it may be experienced with substantially different symptoms or behaviors in another culture. –China: Lower back pain –Western Culture: Feelings of pain or guilt Somatization Disorder is a mental disorder characterized by recurring, multiple, and current, clinically significant complaints about somatic symptoms. Chinese rarely complain of feeling sad or depressed. Marsella: affective symptoms are typical of individualistic cultures.

5 EATING DISORDER

6 Eating Disorders: Bulimia Nervosa Bulimia Nervosa: An eating disorder characterized by the undertaking of binge-eating and then use compensatory methods to prevent weight gain. National Institute of Mental Health: Between 2 & 3% of women and.02-.03% of men in the US have been diagnosed with Bulimia. Frude (1998): Female to Male Ratio of Bulimia sufferers is approximately 10 Females to 1 Male. More than 5 million people are believed to experience an eating disorder in the U.S. alone. Symptomology of Bulimia: –Isolated episodes of binge-eating & purging –Preoccupation with eating –Idealization of thinness –Fear of becoming fat  Body dissatisfaction and desire to be thin is high in Iranian Culture.

7 ABCS SYMPTOM- OLOGY A: Feelings of inadequacy, guilt, or shame B: recurrent episodes of binge eating; use of vomiting, laxatives, exercise, or dieting to control weight. C: negative self-image; poor body image, tendency to perceive events as more stressful than most people would; perfectionism. S: Swollen salivary glands; erosion of tooth enamel; stomach or intestinal problems and, in some cases, heart problems.

8 ETIOLOGY OF BULIMIA

9 Biological Strober (2000): found that first degree relatives of women with bulimia nervosa are ten times more likely than average to develop the disorder. Serotonin: Increased levels of serotonin stimulate the medial hypothalamus and decrease food intake. Smith(1990) found that when serotonin levels were reduced in recovered bulimic patients  engaged in cognitive patterns that were related to eating disorders (i.e., feeling fat).

10 Cognitive Body-Image distortion hypothesis (Bruch 1962): eating disorder patients suffer from the delusion that they are fat. –Patients reflect their emotional appraisal rather than their perceptual experience. –Slade & Brodie (1994): those who suffer from an eating disorder are in fact uncertain about the size and shape of their own body. Gender Difference: Men generally select very similar figures to their own sex, whereas women choose ideal and attractive body shapes. Cognitive Disinhibition (Polivy and Herman): occurs due to dichotomous thinking.

11 Socio- cultural ”Perfect Body Figure” has changed over the years. –1950’s: Female sex symbols had much larger bodies compared to present day A more rounded figure has been considered ideal in other cultures, which suggests that the current position might be open to change. People are constantly comparing themselves with others  Which leads to, standards of beauty becoming increasingly unattainable-- particularly for women. Eating disorders can lead to depression, and begin with the need for [women] to go on a diet. There is a worldwide cultural emphasis on thinness as the ideal body shape. Sanders and Bazalgette (1993) study on dolls  Dolls body types were transformed into human measurements and found that the dolls had tiny hips and waists, with greatly exaggerated inside leg measurements.


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