MENTAL ILLNESS
Download
Report
Transcript MENTAL ILLNESS
MENTAL ILLNESS
Sociological Perspectives
“If you talk to God, you are praying. If
God talks to you, you have
schizophrenia.” (Thomas Szasz)
ISSUES:
► Difficulty
in classifying illnesses
Measuring issues
Validity in diagnosis
► Social
Factors
Social Class
Gender
Race & Ethnicity
Before we move on to this…
► Classical
school of criminology
Rational choice
Maximize pleasure/minimize pain
Punishment should fit crime
►Be
sufficiently harsh to deter but not overly harsh
►This will lead to rational calculation to conform
►What
deviance does this not explain?
Classifications
► Organic
Disorders (brain damage, head
injury, aging, drug abuse, etc.)
► Functional disorders
Psychotic Disorders
►Schizophrenia,
manic-depressive
Neurotic Disorders
►Anxiety,
Obsessive-Compulsive, Depression, etc.
Character Disorders
►Sociopathic,
antisocial personality
How do we measure mental illness in
a population?
► Do
we look at who is admitted to mental
institutions?
► Do we look at who visits therapists and
psychiatrists?
Can you see why this might be problematic?
How else would we count the numbers and distribution
of mentally ill?
How do we know the diagnostic categories we use
really indicate mental illness?
Social Factors
► Sociologists
distribution
interested in patterns of
Most consistent finding across studies is that
lower socio-economic groups have greater
amount of mental illness
►Why?
Why? Well, two possibilities…
►Social
Selection:
Lower class position is a consequence of mental illness
Mentally ill people drift downward into lower income
groups/neighborhoods
►Social
Causation:
Lower class position is a cause of mental illness
Social stress causes mental illness; lower income people
experience more social stress
► Which
do you think it is?
GENDER
► Studies
conflict as to whether women or
men have higher rates of mental illness and
about which groups suffers more social
stress
Men have higher rates of antisocial personality
and paranoia, and substance abuse disorders
Women have higher rates of certain illnesses
►Depression
►Anxiety/panic
WHY the gender difference?
► Socialization
to Social Roles
Women more likely to turn stress inward
Men more likely to turn stress outward
Women believed to be more socially connected
and integrated so less likely to act out
aggressively against others
Men more vulnerable to “material loss” than
women
Perspectives on What Mental
Illness Is…
Hard
Soft
Soft
Hard
Medical Medical Labeling Labeling
MEDICAL: Disease Model
►
HARD
Mental illness is a disease like any other
Has biological basis
Popular in early to mid 1900s
Many psychiatrists hold this view
►
SOFT
Mental illness is like a disease
► Most
do not have true bio basis but some do
After WWII thru late 60s: Psychosocial Model (psychoanalysts)
► Mental illness is a result of unresolved conflict from childhood
► Since 1960s, social stress like loss of loved one, etc.
LABELING: Socially Constructed
► SOFT
Sociological View
► Some
based
mental illness exists but most is probably not biologically
Over-diagnosed and over-medicated
Cultural tendency to create to treat behaviors medically
► HARD
Mental illness is a myth
► It
does not exist at all; it is simply a label for behavior that is
problematic or that we do not understand
► The behaviors we associate with mental illness exist but there is
no evidence they are caused by a mental problem
Simply non-normative behaviors!
Summary
► Medical
Model vs Labeling Model
These reflect expert opinions about the nature
of mental illness
Most psychologists take soft medical view
►Not
actual illnesses in traditional sense but respond
well to treatment so we treat!
Most sociologists take soft labeling view
►Too
many behaviors are labeled as illness
►Pathologizes behavior, medicates people
unncecessarily
In the Rosenhan reading, the author’s study
would fit into which perspective?
A.
B.
Medical
Labeling
50%
50%
Medical
Labeling
Rosenhan Study
► What
does this study demonstrate?
Expert medical authority/power in diagnosis
The “stickiness” of the label
Lack of clarity regarding indicators of mental
illness
►This
study was from the 1970s--do you think this
study would have relevance today?
Medicalization of Deviance
► The
process by which medical experts
assert authority over an aspect of behavior
previously seen as simply “deviant”
Has been a trend since the 1950s-60s
Medical-Industrial Complex
►A
term used to refer to the coinciding
interests of physicians, and the
pharmaceutical industry to expand
diagnoses
•
American Medical Association and
American Psychiatric Association have
monopolies on diagnosing and treating
illness
► Some
behaviors that were seen as prompted by
“free will” or individual difference or character
flaws that are now seen as illnesses:
Alcoholism/addiction
Attention deficit disorder (hyperkinesis)
Compulsive gambling
Compulsive shopping
Internet addiction
Sex addiction
Eating disorders
Learning disabilities
MEDICALIZATION OF DEVIANCE
► Tendency
since 1960s and increasingly to treat
deviant behaviors as medical conditions
► POSITIVES:
• Many people helped by medications and educational
accommodations
• Illness diagnosis is less stigmatizing than a “deviant”
label
• Parents embrace the idea that behavior is “genetic” or
“biochemical”—why?
Concerns
►
Pharmaceutical revolution
Since the 1950s
► Medical
Social Control
Problematic behavior medicated rather than
addressed substantively
► AMA/APA
monopoly
Who has a lack on categorizing, diagnosing and
prescribing?
Example
► Person
who is completely sane and functional in all
aspects of life but…
Wants to amputate his leg
Has felt his whole life that he is in the wrong body
► Called
“Amputee Wannabes”
Is this person mentally ill?
What is normal?
How do you know?
Is he only if we create a diagnostic category for him?
Do you think there is a diagnosis?
Body Integrity Identity Disorder
► To
get the diagnosis a person must be deemed
otherwise mentally healthy (i.e. not psychotic)
► Depression and sadness about not being an
amputee
Feeling incomplete with all limbs
Wants elective amputation
Reports having felt this way since childhood
► Do
you think this is a mental disorder?
How would you know for sure?
► Could it be just “difference”?
For more info…
► www.CHADD.com
► www.BIID.org
► http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/s
hows/medicating/