Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
75 views

Module 2.1

The document discusses objectives for clinical assessment and diagnosis of psychological disorders. It describes the purposes of clinical assessment as understanding individuals, predicting behavior, planning and evaluating treatment. Assessment begins broadly and funnels down to specific problem areas. Key concepts in assessment are reliability, validity, and standardization. Common assessment methods include clinical interviews, mental status exams, behavioral observations, psychological testing, neuropsychological testing, and neuroimaging. The document also discusses the foundations of diagnosing psychological disorders through classification systems like the DSM.

Uploaded by

Ken Santos
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
75 views

Module 2.1

The document discusses objectives for clinical assessment and diagnosis of psychological disorders. It describes the purposes of clinical assessment as understanding individuals, predicting behavior, planning and evaluating treatment. Assessment begins broadly and funnels down to specific problem areas. Key concepts in assessment are reliability, validity, and standardization. Common assessment methods include clinical interviews, mental status exams, behavioral observations, psychological testing, neuropsychological testing, and neuroimaging. The document also discusses the foundations of diagnosing psychological disorders through classification systems like the DSM.

Uploaded by

Ken Santos
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 7

Objectives

 Develop skills and techniques in


assessing and diagnosing psychological
Chapter 3 disorders.
 Master various symptomatology terms
Clinical Assessment and Diagnosis used in assessment and diagnosis of
psychological disorders.

Assessing Psychological Disorders Three Concepts Determine the Value of Assessment

 Purposes of Clinical Assessment


 To understand the individual
 To predict behavior
 To plan treatment
 To evaluate treatment outcome
 Analogous to a Funnel
 Starts broad
 Multidimensional in approach
 Narrow to specific problem areas

1
Three Concepts Determine the Value of Assessment Domains of Assessment:
The Clinical Interview and Physical Exam
 Reliability
 Physical Exam – Referral to physician
 Examples include test-retest, inter-rater reliability
 Rule out medical conditions
 Validity  Clinical Interview
 Examples include content, concurrent,  Most common clinical assessment method
discriminant, construct, and face validity  Structured or semi-structured
 Standardization and Norms  Mental Status Exam
 Examples include administration procedures,  Appearance and behavior
scoring, and evaluation of data  Thought processes
 Mood and affect
 Intellectual functioning
 Sensorium

Clinical Assessment Mental Status Exam


Collect
Data

 “The process of clinical assessment in


psychopathology has been likened to a
funnel” p.70 The Clinical Interview
 The clinical interview- the interview
gathers information on current and The Mental Status exam
past behavior, attitudes, and emotions, Behavioral Assessment
as well as a detailed history of the Psychological Testing
individual’s life in general and of the
presenting problem Physical Examination
 Mental Status Exam- involves the Neuropsychological
systematic observation of an Testing
individual’s behavior ( appearance, Psychophysiological
behavior, thoughts process, mood, EKG/EEG
affect, intellectual functioning and Neuroimaging
sensorium).
Diagnosis

2
Domains of Assessment: Domains of Assessment:
Behavioral Assessment and Observation Behavioral Assessment and Observation
 Behavioral Assessment
 Focus on here and now
 Tends to be direct and minimally inferential
 Target behaviors are identified and observed
 Focus on antecedents, behaviors, and
consequences
 Behavioral Observation and Behavioral Assessment
 Can be either formal or informal
 Self-monitoring vs. others observing
 Problem of reactivity using direct observation

Domains of Assessment: Rorschach Test


Psychological Testing and Projective Tests

 Psychological Testing
 Must be reliable and valid
 Projective Tests
 Project aspects of personality onto ambiguous
stimuli
 Roots in psychoanalytic tradition
 High degree of inference in scoring and
interpretation
 Examples include the Rorschach Inkblot Test,
Thematic Apperception Test
 Reliability and validity data tend to be mixed

3
Thematic Apperception Test Domains of Assessment: Psychological
Testing and Objective Tests
 Objective Tests
 Test stimuli are minimally ambiguous
 Roots in empirical tradition
 Require minimal inference in scoring and interpretation
 Objective Personality Tests
 Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI, MMPI-
2, MMPI-A)
 Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory
 Objective Intelligence Tests
 WAIS/WISC – Performance and Verbal Scales
 Stanford-Binet – Mental Age/Age = IQ
 Raven Progressive Matrices Test – Non-verbal

Domains of Assessment: Psychological Domains of Assessment:


Testing and Neuropsychology Neuroimaging and Brain Structure
 Neuropsychological Tests  Neuroimaging: Pictures of the Brain
 Assess broad range of skills and abilities
 Allows examination of brain structure and function
 Goal is to understand brain-behavior relations  Imaging Brain Structure
 Used to evaluate a person’s assets and deficits
 Computerized axial tomography (CAT or CT scan)
 Examples include the Luria-Nebraska and  CAT utilizes X-rays of brain; pictures in slices
Halstead-Reitan Batteries
 Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
 Overlap with intelligence tests
 MRI has better resolution than CAT scan
 MRI operates via strong magnetic field around
head

4
Domains of Assessment: Diagnosing Psychological Disorders:
Neuroimaging and Brain Function (cont.) Foundations in Classification
 Imaging Brain Function  Clinical Assessment vs. Psychiatric Diagnosis
 Positron emission tomography (PET)  Assessment – Idiographic approach
 Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT)  Diagnosis – Nomothetic approach
 Both are important in treatment planning and
 Both involve injection of radioactive isotopes intervention
 React with oxygen, blood, and glucose in the brain  Diagnostic Classification
 Functional MRI (fMRI) – Brief changes in brain activity  Classification is central to all sciences
 Used mainly in research
 Develop categories based on shared attributes
 Terminology of Classification Systems
 Taxonomy – Classification in a scientific context
 Nosology – Taxonomy in psychological / medical
contexts
 Nomenclature – Nosological labels (e.g., panic
disorder)

Diagnosing and Classifying Psychological Purposes and Evolution of the DSM


Disorders
 Purposes of the DSM System
 The Nature and Forms of Classification Systems
 Aid communication
 Classical (or pure) categorical approach – Categories
 Evaluate prognosis and need for treatment
 Dimensional approach – Classification along dimensions  Treatment planning
 Prototypical approach – Both classical and dimensional  DSM-I (1952) and DSM-II (1968)
 Two Widely Used Classification Systems  Both relied on unproven theories and were unreliable
 International Classification of Diseases and Health  DSM-III (1980) and DSM-III-R
Related Problems (ICD-10); published by the World  Were atheoretical, emphasizing clinical description
Health Organization  Multiaxial system with detailed criterion sets for
 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders disorders
(DSM); published by the American Psychiatric  Problems included low reliability, and reliance on
Association; currently the DSM-V committee consensus

5
History of the DSM
DSM-5 Diagnostic Categories
 DSM-I: 1952
 Neurodevelopmental  Dissociative disorders
 DSM-II: 1968 disorders  Somatic symptom and
 DSM-III: 1980; DSM-III-R: 1987  Elimination disorders related disorders
 Disruptive, impulse-control,  Feeding and eating
 DSM-IV: 1994; DSM-IV-TR: 2000 and conduct disorders disorders
 DSM-5: 2013  Schizophrenia spectrum  Sleep-wake disorders
and other psychotic  Sexual dysfunctions
 The general consensus is that DSM-5 is largely disorders  Gender dysphoria
unchanged from DSM-IV although some new disorders  Bipolar and related  Substance-related and
disorders addictive disorders
are introduced and other disorders have been
 Depressive disorders
reclassified  Neurocognitive disorders
 Anxiety disorders  Personality disorders
 Obsessive-compulsive and  Paraphilic disorders
related disorders
 Trauma- and stressor-  Other mental disorders
related disorders

The DSM-IV Unresolved Issues in the DSM-IV


 Basic Characteristics
 What Are the Optimal Thresholds for Diagnosis?
 Five axes describing full clinical presentation
 Clear inclusion and exclusion criteria for disorders  Examples include level or distress, impairment, number
of required symptoms
 Disorders are categorized under broad headings
 Empircally grounded prototypic approach to  Arbitrary Time Periods in the Definitions of Diagnoses
classification  Should Other Axes Be Included?
 The Five DSM-IV Axes  Examples include premorbid history, treatment response,
 Axis I – Most major disorders family functioning
 Axis II – Stable, enduring problems (e.g., personality  Is the DSM-IV System Optimal for Treatment or Research?
disorders, mental retardation)  The Problem of Comorbidity
 Axis III – Medical conditions related to abnormal
behavior  Defined as two or more disorders for the same person
 Axis IV – Psychosocial problems  High comorbidity is the rule clinically
 Axis V – Global clinician rating of adaptive functioning  Comorbidity threatens the validity of separate diagnoses
 Other Unique Features of the DSM-IV

6
Summary of Clinical Assessment and Diagnosis

 Clinical Assessment and Diagnosis


 To provide a complete picture of the client
 To aid understanding and ameliorating human
suffering
 Require reliable, valid, and standardized
information
 Dangers of Diagnosis
 Problem of reification
 Problem of stigmatization
 Assessment and Diagnosis
 The core of abnormal psychology
 Requires a multidimensional perspective

You might also like