1 / 19

Depression

Depression. Depression Signs and Symptoms. At Least 5 of the 9 for a two week period Depressed mood most of the day Reduced interest in pleasurable activities Weight changes Sleep Problems Psychomotor agitation or retardation Lack of energy and motivation Poor concentration

reegan
Télécharger la présentation

Depression

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Depression

  2. Depression Signs and Symptoms • At Least 5 of the 9 for a two week period • Depressed mood most of the day • Reduced interest in pleasurable activities • Weight changes • Sleep Problems • Psychomotor agitation or retardation • Lack of energy and motivation • Poor concentration • Feelings of worthlessness • Thoughts of death

  3. Sex Differences in Depression • Females (2-3 x more likely) • Self-Image and Body Image (female<male) • Hormonal Changes Alter Vulnerability to MDD • Diathesis-Stress Model (predisposition+stressor) • Females tend to focus on emotions and related thoughts more than males • Females face more discrimination • Males • Expression

  4. Depression: Risk Factors • Unavailable or Neglectful Parents • Having a Depressed Parent • Family or Marital Conflict • Poor Peer Relations • Romantic Relationship Problems • Transitions • Previous Depression Predicts Future Depression

  5. Treatment • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy • Challenges • Medication • Does it increase risk of suicide?

  6. Suicide

  7. Suicide • Ninth leading cause of death for adults in U.S. • At least 2/3 of suicide attempters are under 35 • Every 20 minutes someone in the U.S. suicides • May be as many as 6 million attempts per year • Women are 3 -4 times more likely to attempt suicide • Men are 4-5 times more likely to succeed • Rates of attempts are 3-4 times higher in people who are divorced or separated • Most attempts are related to relational discord • Guns are the means in 60% of suicides

  8. Adolescent Suicide • Seventh leading cause of death in 5-14 yo. • Third leading cause of death in 15-24 yo. • First two are accidents and homicides) • Suicide rate in teens tripled from 1950’s to mid 1980’s. • Similar trends were noted in 23 out of 29 countries studied (Lester, 1988). • Between 7-16% of high school students report an attempt • Between 4-8% of 11th and 12th graders an attempt • These are the highest rates of attempts at any point in the life span (large proportion have low lethality). • However, 9% of males in this age range and 1-4% of females complete within 5 years.

  9. Risk Factors for Adolescent Suicide • Mental Disorders (more = more risk) • Conduct Disorder and Substance Abuse are more common in completers. • Mood Disorders (Depression & Anxiety) are more common among nonfatal attempters. • Negative Life Events (emotional pain) • Availability of Firearms in the home. • Stage of Life Transitions (autonomy vs control) • Genetic Factors (twin studies ) • Hospitalized pts with Low Serotonin 10x risk • Contagion factors 1-13% (Velting, 1997)

  10. Sex Differences • Females attempt more often • Self-Image and Body Image (female<male) • Hormonal changes alter vulnerability to MDD • Females tend to focus on emotions and related thoughts more than males • Females face more discrimination • Males • Emotional expression and suicide are counter male culture • Buck-it-up dude!

  11. Suicide: Assessment How do I know?

  12. Assessment of Risk I. • Depressive Disorders and other Mental Health problems • Alcoholism and other Substance Abuse • Suicide Ideation • Prior Attempts • Lethal Methods • Isolation (friends and family) • Cognitive Rigidity (Hopelessness)

  13. Assessment of Risk II. • Modeling (suicide in the family) • Economic or Work Problems • Marital Problems • Stress and Stressful Events • Anger, Aggression, Irritability • Physical Illness • Giving Away Personal Items • Sudden Happiness • Repetition and Combination of All Factors

  14. Why do adolescents suicide? Psychache?

  15. In almost every case suicide is caused by pain, a certain kind of pain—psychological pain, or “psychache”… Suicidal death, in other words, is an escape from pain… Pain is nature’s great signal. Pain warns us; pain both mobilizes us and saps our strength; pain, by its very nature, makes us want to stop it or escape from it… Psychache is the hurt, anguish or ache that takes hold in the mind. It is intrinsically psychological, the pain of excessively felt shame, guilt, fear, anxiety, loneliness, angst, and dread of growing old or of dying badly. When psychache occurs, its introspective reality is undeniable. Suicide happens when the psychache is deemed unbearable and death is actively sought to stop the unceasing flow of painful consciousness. Suicide is a tragic drama in the mind (Schneidman, 1997, pp 23, 29)

  16. Why Suicide? • Psychache • Stressors exceed ones adaptive capacity • Limited support network • Chronic history of instability • Acute life event • Cognitive limitations (problem solving, impulsivity) • Genetic and Biological Factors • Physiology and Chemistry • Personality • Neuroticism- (high negative emotionality) • Copy Cat or Contagion Effect

  17. Intervention • Be Direct • Pay Attention • Accept the Person without Judgment • Be Calm • Assure • Seek help

  18. Prevention • Intensive individualized attention • Community-wide multi-agency collaborative approaches • Early identification and intervention

  19. The Impact of Suicide

More Related