Psychiatry: Human Development Throughout The Life Cycle
Psychiatry: Human Development Throughout The Life Cycle
Psychiatry: Human Development Throughout The Life Cycle
Human Development
Throughout the Life Cycle
(Chapter 2 – Kaplan and Sadock’s Synopsis of Psychiatry)
Why study the Life Cycle?
To clarify people’s
behavior
To predict complications
and problems that can arise
Life-Cycle Theories
Sigmund Freud
Erik Erikson
Jean Piaget
Daniel Levinson
Sigmund Freud
Three Essays on the Theory
of Sexuality
Individuation as a process
of growth and expansion of
the personality
Epigentic
Normality as Health
Normality as Utopia
Normality as Average
Normality as Process
Human Development
Prenatal Period
Infancy
Middle Years
Adolescence
Adulthood
Late Adulthood
Prenatal Period (embryo – right before birth)
Embryo vs Fetus
Prenatal Counselling
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
Affects 1/3 of all infants born
to alcoholic women
S/Sx:
Pre natal growth retardation
Microphthalmia, short
palpebral fissures, midface
hypoplasia, smooth or short
philtrum, thin upper lip
Microcephaly, delayed dev’t,
hyperactivity, attention
deficits, learning disability,
intellectual deficits, seizures
Prenatal Period
Smoking Teratogenic medications
Lower than average birth Tetracycline, phenytoin,
weight progesterone-estrogens,
lithium etc...
Severe radiation during
first 20 weeks
Gross deformities
Infancy (birth to 15 months)
Moro Reflex
Developmental Landmarks (Infancy)
LANGUAGE COGNITVE
Cries at birth By the end of infancy,
previous primitive reflexes
Vocalizes (guttural or transformed into voluntary
babbling sounds) by 8 actions
weeks
Begins to interact with the
environment and
experience feedback from
their own bodies
Stages of Cognitive Development
by Piaget
Developmental Landmarks (Infancy)
EMOTIONAL SOCIAL
Development is at parallel At 3 weeks, Imitates facial
with cognition movements of adult
caretakers
Importance of the
caretaker as he/she At 2 months, endogenous
provides the major stimulus smiling
for both mental and
emotional growth At 4 months, exogenous
smiling
Regular and predictable
interaction between ***Study Table 2.3-1 and 2.3- 3 of
infants’ behavioral Kaplan, Landmarks of Normal
repertoire and caretakers’ Behavioral Development and
Language Development
social responses
Attachment
Infants show a rapidly increasing responsivity to the
external environment and an ability to form a special
relationship with significant primary caretakers
Harry Harlow
Experimented on rhesus monkeys and effects of social
isolation
John Bowlby
Attachment behavior develops during first year of life as
the maintenance of physical contact between the mother
and child when the child is hungry, frightened or distress
Early separation had severe negative effect’s on children’s
emotional and intellectual development
Attachment
Mary Ainsworth
Interaction between mother and baby during the
attachment period significantly influences the baby’s
current and future behavior
Attachment serves to reduce anxiety and enables a child to
move from the attachment figure and to explore the
environment (secure base effect)
Transitional object (term coined by Donald Winnicott) are
inanimate objects which serves a secure base for children
Maternal sensitivity and responsiveness = secure
attachment
Stranger Anxiety vs
Separation Anxiety
Stranger Anxiety Separation Anxiety
Fear of strangers which Occurs when separation
results from a baby’s from the person to whom
growing ability to the infant is attached
distinguish caretakers from
other people Occurs between 10-18 mos.
LANGUAGE COGNITVE
Vocalizations become Begin to reason and to
distinct listen to explanations that
can help them tolerate
Can name a few objects delay
and make needs known in 1
or 2 words Create new behaviors from
old ones (originality0 and
engage in symbolic
activities
Developmental Landmarks (Toddler)
EMOTIONAL SOCIAL
Exploratory excitement, Has capacities for an
assertive pleasure, organized demonstration of
pleasure in discovery and in love (hugging, smiling,
developing new behavior kissing) and protest (crying,
banging, biting, kicking)
Developmental Landmarks (Toddler)
SEXUAL SPHINCTER CONTROL
DEVELOPMENT and SLEEP
At 2 ½ years, gender Toilet training is started
identity (the conviction of
being a boy or a girl) At 2 ½ years old, control of
becomes fixed daytime urination achieved
At 4 years, control of
nighttime urination and
bowel control is
accomplished
Parenting
In infancy, major responsibility is to meet the infants’
needs in a sensitive and consistent fashion
In the toddler stage, major responsibility is firmness
about boundaries of acceptable behavior and
encouragement of the child’s progressive emancipation
Other issue include the struggle for the exclusive
affection and attention of their parents
Preschool Period (2 ½ years – 6 years)
Marked by physical and
emotional growth
LANGUAGE COGNITVE
Language expands Generally, still egocentric
thinking
Use of sentences Incapable of empathy
EMOTIONAL SOCIAL
Can express complex Emerging capacity for
emotions (love, cooperation and sharing
unhappiness, jealousy,
envy) both preverbally and Aware of their bodies, of the
verbally genitalia, and of differences
between the sexes
Anxiety is related to loss of
a person who was Band-Aid Phase
loved/depended on and to
Conscience is established
loss of
approval/acceptance Rules as absolute
Shame and humiliation are
Absolute
evident
Retribution/Imminent Justice
Other Issues...
Sibling Rivalry
Favoritism
Play
Begin to distinguish reality from fantasy
Pretend games, dramatic play are common
Play behavior reflects their social development
Growth can also be traced through their drawings
Imaginary Companions
Usually appear during preschool, and in children with
above-average intelligence
Disappear by age 12
Middle Years (6 years – 12 years)
Enter elementary school
Psychosexual and
Psychosexual Moratorium
Developmental Landmarks (Middle Years)
LANGUAGE COGNITVE
Can express complex ideas Thinking is logical and
with relations among organized
several elements
By age 9, ability to
concentrate is well
established
EMOTIONAL SOCIAL
Empathy and concern for Peer interaction takes
others develop precedence
Chum Period
Other Issues...
Sex Role Development
Sex roles are similar to their gender identity
Independence, aggressiveness and physical play are
encouraged in boys while dependence, verbalization and
physical intimacy in girls
Nowadays, society is more tolerant in its expectations of
the sexes, and roles become less rigid
Rapid acceleration of
skeletal growth and
beginnings of physical
sexual development
Consolidation of
personality formation
Puberty
Puberty is a physical process of change characterized by
the development of secondary sexual characteristics
(versus adolescence is psychological process of change)
Onset is triggered by the maturation of the HPAG axis
marked by secretion of sex steroids which produces the
manifestations of the primary and secondary sex
characteristics
Girls enter puberty 12 to 18 months earlier than boys
with an average of 11 years (range of 11-13) and 13
years for boys (range of 10-14)
Pubertal Stages
Risk-Taking Behavior
Alcohol, tobacco, and other substance use
Promiscuous sexual activity
Accident-prone behavior
Pregnancy
Violence
Adulthood (20 years above)
3 main parts:
Young/Early (20-40 y.o.)
Middle (40-65 y.o.)
Late
Early Adulthood (20 years – 40 years)
Noon of life
Reviews the past, how life has gone and deciding what
the future will be like
Experiences the gap between early aspirations to
current achievements
Late Adulthood (65 years and above)
Senescence or aging
process is characterized by
a gradual decline in the
functioning of all the
body’s systems
Longevity
Ageism
Retirement
Sexual Activity
Psychiatric problems
LOSS – predominant theme that characterizes the
emotional experiences of old people
Thanatology:
Death and Bereavement
Thanatology is the study of
the experience of dying
and bereavement.
Elisabeth Kübler-Ross
enumerated 5 Stages of
reactions to impending
death
Grief, Mourning, and Bereavement
Terms that apply to psychological reactions to those
who survive a significant loss
Grief
Subjective feeling precipitated by the death of a loved one
Mourning
Process by which grief is resolved; it is the societal
expression of post-bereavement behavior and practices
Bereavement
State of being deprived of someone by death
Grief
Normal Grief versus Pathological Grief
Grief Period
Anticipatory Grief