Psychotic Disorders
Full course description
This course deals with disorders of processes involving perception and thinking. In films or books, psychotic characters usually display bizarre and unpredictable behaviours that people have difficulty identifying with. Therefore, most people feel uncomfortable around someone who is (or has been) diagnosed as suffering from a psychotic disorder.
The aim of this course is to make psychotic disorders more relatable and understandable for students. It aims to allow them to view such disorders within the context of experiences they are familiar with. In principle, anyone can become psychotic, but some people are more prone to becoming so than others, and in some people such disorders are more likely to become chronic. More specifically, students will develop an in-depth knowledge of the relationship between psychotic disorders and violent behaviour, including its intersection with substance use problems. This knowledge will be gained through considering questions such as ‘Can we argue that psychotic patients have an increased risk to become violent? If so, does that relate to specific symptomatology, such as hearing voices telling you to do certain things? Is itpossibe to feign symptoms of a psychotic disorder?’
This course examine psychosis from many theoretical perspectives, and students will be expected to delve into the various theories while developing an understanding of their strengths and limitations.
The final assessment for this course is a numerical grade between 0,0 and 10,0.
Course objectives
At the end of this course students:
- can describe the differences between the DSM-5 psychotic disorders and use this knowledge to make a differential diagnosis;
- understand what psychomimetic drugs are and how they have been used to model psychosis
- have knowledge of the different theoretical models explaining psychotic disorders;
- can explain the relationship between psychotic disorders and violence and describe possible risk factors (such as substance use problems) and protective factors;
- can explain the features and theoretical underpinnings of command hallucinations and paranoid delusions;
- can describe the different treatment options that are the current state of the science;
- can explain what the features of feigned hallucinations and delusions are.
- L. Kloft - Heller