Disorders Of Bodily Preoccupation Sarason Abnormal Psychology 12e
Disorders Of Bodily Preoccupation Sarason, Abnormal Psychology, 12/e, (c) 2005, Prentice Hall
Somatoform Disorders ØBody response that suggest a physical problem, often dramatic in nature. ØNo identifiable physical etiology. ØIt is generally thought that anxiety or other emotions are being expressed through physical means. Sarason, Abnormal Psychology, 11/e 12/e, (c) 2005, Prentice Hall 2 by Sarason & Sarason © 2005
Somatoform Disorders Break down into: Pain disorders Somatization disorders (Briquet's syndrome) Conversion disorder Hypochondriasis Body dysmorphic disorder Sarason, Abnormal Psychology, 11/e 12/e, (c) 2005, Prentice Hall 3 by Sarason & Sarason © 2005
Pain Disorders ØPain disorders exist when pain reports are inconsistent with, or in excess of what would be expected from any physical injury (if one exists) ØCan be acute (less than 6 months duration) or chronic ØA biopsychosocial model of pain is widely accepted today Sarason, Abnormal Psychology, 11/e 12/e, (c) 2005, Prentice Hall 4 by Sarason & Sarason © 2005
Treating Pain Disorders Ø Medication Ø Surgery Ø Operant conditioning Ø Cognitive-behavioral therapy Ø Biofeedback Ø Psychotherapy Sarason, Abnormal Psychology, 11/e 12/e, (c) 2005, Prentice Hall 5 by Sarason & Sarason © 2005
Conversion Disorder Occurs when the body appears healthy (no organic impairment), yet does not function properly. - Symptoms affect voluntary motor or sensory functioning - Psychological factors judged to be causally related (e. g. shown by temporal relationship, help avoid or escape, elicit support) - Symptoms are not under voluntary control - Symptoms are not fully explicable by physical mechanism - Symptoms not limited to pain or sexual dysfunction - Symptoms are not due to somatization or schizophrenia Most criteria are by exclusion—hard to prove Sarason, Abnormal Psychology, 11/e 12/e, (c) 2005, Prentice Hall 6 by Sarason & Sarason © 2005
A model of Hypochondriasis Sarason, Abnormal Psychology, 11/e 12/e, (c) 2005, Prentice Hall 7 by Sarason & Sarason © 2005
Differential diagnosis Major alternatives are: 1. Real, but undiagnosed medical disorder 2. Malingering (presenting symptoms for secondary gain) 3. Factitious Disorder in which symptoms are voluntarily produced by the person An extreme form of Factitious Disorder is Munchausen Syndrome, in which the person might simulate symptoms or even manipulate medical test results Sarason, Abnormal Psychology, 11/e 12/e, (c) 2005, Prentice Hall 8 by Sarason & Sarason © 2005
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