Is he mentally ill?


Psychosocial causal factors



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Psychosocial causal factors

  • Diathesis stress
  • Low social support


Where do depressed people go first? Katon and Walker 1998

  • Where do depressed people go first? Katon and Walker 1998

    • 41 % initially go to physician with complaints of feeling ill
    • 37 % report pain, 12 % report general fatigue and tiredness
  • Treatments for Unipolar Depression

    • Only about 40 % of people with mood disorders receive minimally adequate care
    • In one study of the depressed poor, only 2/3 said that they had ever received the diagnosis (Bazargan et al 2005)


Second most prescribed class of meds (behind blood pressure)

  • Second most prescribed class of meds (behind blood pressure)

    • 3 of the 12 most prescribed meds are antidepressants (Gitlin, 2002)
    • 74 % of those who are depressed take meds alone or with therapy. In 1990, that was 37 % . Today 60 % receive therapy. In 1990, that was 71 % (Boyles, 2002).
  • Will meds help us all?

    • Knutson et al 1998—Gave nondepressed volunteers antidepressants—noted improvements in negative symptoms like hostility and fear, but did not increase positive feelings like happiness and excitement
  • First class—MAOIs—developed in 1950s

    • Monamine oxidase inhibitors—Parnate, Marplan—dev. as tx for TB, but people became less depressed
    • Slows activity of serotonin and norepinephrin


Tricyclics—Tofranil, Elavil, Anafranil, Pamelor

  • Tricyclics—Tofranil, Elavil, Anafranil, Pamelor

    • Named for molecular structure
    • Created for schizophrenia, but work better for depression
    • Fewer serious side effects but—drowsiness, dry mouth, constipation, decreased sex drive, nausea, tremors, blurred vision, can occas. stimulate mania, increase effects of both when taken with alcohol, fatal in overdose
  • SSRIs—1988-Prozac—most widely prescribed antidepressant in the world

    • Less deadly in overdose
    • Better tolerated but nervousness, insomnia, sexual dysfunction, long time to effectiveness
    • 60-70% on antidepressants improve
    • Course of treatment—


ECT—severely depressed at imminent risk; 6-12 sessions every other day, varying levels of amnesia persist; can be useful in the elderly. Effective for 50-80 % who do not respond to meds

  • ECT—severely depressed at imminent risk; 6-12 sessions every other day, varying levels of amnesia persist; can be useful in the elderly. Effective for 50-80 % who do not respond to meds

  • Bright light therapy—originally just for SAD, but may help with other types of depression

  • Transcranial magnetic stimulation—brief, intensive pulsating magnetic transmissions

    • Noninvasive, done in awake patients
    • May be more effective than antidepressants without side effects of ECT
  • Psychopharm for biopolar

    • Mood stabilizers—lithium
    • Tegretol, depakote


Cognitive-behavioral and behavioral activation therapy

  • Cognitive-behavioral and behavioral activation therapy

    • Focuses on here and now problems
    • Teaches people how to evaluate their beliefs and automatic thoughts
    • Equally or more effective than antidepressants
    • More effective at preventing relapse
    • Modified CBT may work for bipolar
  • Interpersonal therapy

    • Not as extensively studied or used
    • Also effective
    • Focuses on current relationship issues, trying to help person understand and change maladaptive interaction patterns
    • Modified for bipolar to stabilize daily life
  • Family and marital therapy

    • Unipolar—focus on reducing marital discord is effective
    • Bipolar—focus on reducing ee and increasing coping effective in preventing relapse


Cognitive, interpersonal and biological are all effective.

  • Cognitive, interpersonal and biological are all effective.

  • Elkin et al 1994, 1989—compared the three with a placebo. Among those who completed tx, sx were almost completely eliminated, compared with 29 % of those on placebo. Drug therapy was faster, but may not prevent relapse as well.

  • Cognitive and interpersonal are not relapse-proof. As many as 30 % of those who respond to these methods may relapse. Continuation or maintenance approaches may help.

  • Behavior therapy alone is not as effective as the other types of tx.

  • Psychodynamic tx is also less effective.

  • Combo of meds and therapy is modestly more effective.

  • ECT acts more quickly than meds, but is equally effective.



Myths about suicide

  • Myths about suicide

  • People who discuss suicide won’t do it

  • Suicide is committed without warning

  • Only people of a certain class commit suicide

  • Religion prevents suicide (devoutness may, though)

  • People who commit suicide are psychotic

  • People who use low-lethal means aren’t serious

  • Thinking about suicide is rare

  • Improvement in emotional state means decreased risk


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