Lesson 3: Alternative Models


Attention


Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this lesson's material, students will be able to:

  • Describe the disease model approach to Mental Illness
  • Distinguish between the presence of the "disease" and the presence of the "disability"
  • Identify the major barriers that persons with Mental Illness may face
  • Describe the role that PSR plays in the course of treatment for persons with Mental Illness

Teaching

Genetic Factors and Mental Illness

When we look at the etiology of mental illness being connected to brain structure and neurochemical imbalances we have to explore the concept that these may be inherited. 

We examine the genetic role in mental illness by studying twins (same as we study many of the questions of genetic and environmental factors in human development and behavior).

The Experience of Mental Illness

Symptoms and Etiology of Mental Illness

Diagnoses and Psychosocial Rehabilitation

Through this content you have been exposed a bit to the medical side of Mental Illness...the establishment of diagnoses to correctly identify the symptomatology and some aspects of the course of treatment (medications, counseling, etc.)

But what has all this to do with PsyR?

PsyR serves to assist people WITH MENTAL ILLNESS in developing the skills and resources necessary to LIVE in the ENVIRONMENT of their choice.

PsyR techniques serve to assist individuals in living WITH the symptoms of their illness just as a person may learn to live with blindness or a hearing impairment. We don't necessarily CURE the illness or even treat the illness itself. PsyR focuses on the barriers that exist within someone's life because they have a mental illness (symptoms) in order to maximize their independence.

So, in a way, the BARRIERS are more important than the DIAGNOSES. We still need to know about diagnosing because it helps us understand what folks are going through...but our focus is on the barriers these symptoms create.

Stress and Mental Illness

      Much has been made regarding the impact of stress upon the etiology of mental illness/disorders. The most commonly cited etiological explanation for mental disorders is the Diathesis-Stress Theory.This  assumes that an individual who was already predisposed biologically to develop mental illness may do so under stressful conditions.  The impact of the stressor upon neurochemistry is thought to be one of the major causal factors in many psychological disorders.Of course, this is just one piece of the puzzle.  Current models of etiology explore the interaction of multiple factors in determining the cause of mental disorders. These are termed, "integrative" models.

Stigma and Mental Illness

  • Labels of mental illness can evoke feelings of fear and rejection in others
  • Symptoms are not often attributable to causes
  • Person First Language
    • A person with Schizophrenia, not a Schizophrenic
    • A person with Depression, not a Depressive
  • Societal expectations of behavior are flexible…to a point…
    • What is the breaking point where we identify someone as deviant or abnormal?
    • Work
    • Dress
    • Personal Hygiene
    • Language
  • We lack a clear, well-known etiology for mental illness so people fear it

Psychiatric Disability

  • What makes a person “disabled”?
  • Mental Illness often strikes in the late teens and early twenties.  What is NORMALLY going on during this time?  THIS is what gets disrupted.
    • Intellectual development
    • Social development
    • Vocational development
    • Issues of identity formation
  • Degree of disability might depend on their “Premorbid” level of functioning.
  • “Disability” is a LEGAL term as well.  It connects individuals to a system of support and social expectation

Psychiatric Rehabilitation
Rehabilitation refers to the process of returning someone to a former state of constructive activity, or function.

What do you think of the following two definitions:

  1. The goal of psychiatric rehabilitation is to enable individuals to compensate for, or eliminate the functional deficits, interpersonal barriers, and environmental barriers created by the disability, and to restore ability for independent living, socialization, and effective life management.
  2. Psychosocial Rehabilitation means that a person who before was afraid to go into a store to order an ice cream soda can now be an ice cream store manager.

PsyR and Treatment

Even though we have been talking about the medical aspects of mental illness...we still see a role for the application of PsyR activities.

For any given individual the constellation of treatment may include medications, housing, group work, vocational work, therapy, and exercise. Each aspect of the treatment plan contributes to the outcomes that the person may experience. This is highly individualized work.

Since PsyR practices focus on the BARRIERS that individuals experience due to their symptomatology, it is often very effective at addressing the pragmatic, every-day issues that come up in a person's life. Every-day issues, when combined with mental illness can be devastating.

In addition, because of the course of many of the mental illnesses, individuals with diagnoses are often lacking specific social experience and social skills that many of us take for granted. Skill training on how to negotiate in the wider social world is some of the most important work we do.


Assessment

Class Discussion

Describe the difference between treating symptoms (clinical applications) and treating the environment (removing barriers).

Lesson 3 Quiz

  1. Utilizing the PsyWeb website, select one of the mental illnesses listed on the left of the page and summarize the symptoms.
  2. Referring to your answer in question 1, which factors may become important to you in your role as a Psychosocial Rehabilitation Practitioner? (Remember we look at how SYMPTOMS create BARRIERS to FUNCTIONING in a specific ENVIRONMENT) Provide a detailed description of ONE symptom and how that symptom may produce a real barrier in the world for that person.
  3. Provide a brief treatment plan idea that you think would be effective in removing or dealing with the barrier that you identified. (Remember, the treatment needs to remove the BARRIER not the SYMPTOM...we are assuming the symptom will stay)

An example of the answer for #2 and #3 might be as follows:

#2 - One of the symptoms of Major Depression includes problems with concentration, thinking, or decision making. This would be a barrier to functioning at home because my client would have difficulty concentrating on the chores he or she would have to complete each week.

#3 - My intervention would be to create a schedule of chores that hangs on the refrigerator. I would be sure that the chores could be done in a short period of time and that not too many chores are required each day.