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Self-fragmentation and self-integration in people with schizophrenia. Volume II, Interpretation and recovery of positive and negative symptoms / Kam-Shing Yip.

eBook Psychology/Psychiatry Collection Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Yip, Kam-Shing, author.
Series:
Mental illnesses and treatments.
Mental Illnesses and Treatments
Nova Biomedical
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Schizophrenia.
Identity (Psychology).
Physical Description:
1 online resource (279 pages).
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
New York : Nova Medicine & Health, [2018]
Summary:
Apart from the biochemical and genetic models, there are many psychosocial theories including psychodynamic, cognitive behavioral, phenomenological, existential, biochemical as well as social construction perspectives in explaining the cause and recovery of schizophrenia. However, in professional intervention and services, all these psychosocial theories are undermined. In Volume I, the book serves to bridge this theoretical gap by a profound revisit of different perspectives and concepts in self-fragmentation and self-integration of persons with schizophrenia.
Contents:
Intro
Contents
Preface
Theoretical Underpinnings of Schizophrenia
Mental Health Recovery Movement
Clinical Recovery for Persons with Mental Problems
Unreachable Theoretical Gap in Recovery from Schizophrenia
Self-Fragmentation and Self-Integration Dilemma in Recovery from Schizophrenia
The Layout of This Book
References
Chapter 1
Diagnosis and a Multi-Dimensional Articulation of Positive Symptoms in Schizophrenia: An Endless Struggle with the Oppressive Environment
Introduction: Diagnosis of Positive Symptoms in Schizophrenia
DSM IV Diagnosis of Positive Symptoms in Schizophrenia
DSM V Diagnosis of Positive Symptoms in Schizophrenia
From Positive Symptoms to an Endless Struggle in Oppressive Environment
Positive Symptoms in Terms of Paranoia, Grandiosity, and Catatonia
A Multi-Dimensional View of Positive Symptoms
Isolated and Split Inner Self with a Very Oppressive Social Environment
Unsettled Struggle in Positive Symptoms
Unsettled Struggle for Existence and Identity
The Gradual Loss of Boundary and Self-Identity
The Loss and Emptiness of Content of Self
The Loss of Substantiality of the Inner Self
The Intolerable Fear, Hatred, and Envy in the Loss
From Implosion to Psychotic Positive Symptoms
Conclusion
Chapter 2
Self-Fragmentation and Self-Integration in Paranoid Delusions and Hallucination: Interpretation and Recovery
Introduction
Theoretical Underpinnings of Paranoia
Self-Attention and the Feeling of Being Watched
Self-Consciousness and Self-Reflection in Paranoia
Defense for Self-Esteem, Ideal Self, and Actual Self
Self-Retreat Vs. Projection
Related Emotions and Paranoia
Themes and Components of Paranoia
A Multi-Dimensional Perspective in Paranoia
Implications to Mental Health Recovery.
A Deficit Orientation Ignoring the Various Dimensions of Paranoia
A Multi-Dimensional Understanding of, and Intervention for, Clients with Paranoia
Beautiful Woman and the Watching, Nasty Man
Understanding P's Paranoid Delusion in Relation to P's Past Experiences and Unfulfilled Needs
Facilitate P to Develop a Proper Sense of Reality
Enable P to Resolve Problems and Difficulties Behind Her Paranoid Delusion
Facilitate P to Understand and Accept Her Discrepancies between What She Expected and What She Encountered in Reality
From Paranoia to Paranoid Delusion in Schizophrenia
Criteria for a Delusion to Be Classified as Persecutory
Formation of Paranoid Delusion as the Threat Increase
Paranoid Delusion in a Form of Anomalous Experiences
Cognitive Behavioral Interpretation of Persecutory Delusion
Affective Process
Reasoning
Threat
Implications in Working with Clients with Paranoid Schizophrenia
Psychodynamic View of Paranoid Delusion in Schizophrenia
Sullivan's Paranoid Dynamism
The Process of Paranoid Dynamism
Projective Identification
Good and Bad Self as Well as Good and Bad Others
Combinations of Projective Identification in Paranoid Delusion
Existential Perspective of Paranoid Delusion in Schizophrenia: The Struggle for Existence and Survival
The Process of Self-Fragmentation and Paranoid Delusions and Hallucinations
Dilemmas in Self-Fragmentation and Paranoid Delusion and Hallucinations
Self-Splitting versus Self-Cohesion Dynamic Force in Paranoid Delusion and Hallucination
Self-Concealment versus Self-Visibility in Paranoid Delusion and Hallucination
Self-Destruction and Self-Preservation in Paranoid Delusion and Hallucination
Chapter 3.
Self-Fragmentation and Self-Integration in Grandiose Delusions and Hallucinations: Interpretation and Recovery
From Grandiose Self to Grandiosity in Mental Illness
Grandiose Self in Normal Life Development
Grandiosity: Natures and Components
Grandiosity in Mania, Narcissistic Personality Disorder, and Other Mental Illness
Grandiosity, Self Disturbance, and Mental Illness
Grandiosity in Persons with Schizophrenia
Grandiosity in Extreme Detachment of Reality and Intense Fantasy: A Kohut Interpretation
Delusive Grandiosity in Persons with Schizophrenia and Severe Mania
Grandiosity and Existentialism: Delusive Autonomy, Freedom and Creativity
Loss of Autonomy, Freedom and Creativity in Actual and Substantially Reality
Formation of Grandiose and Delusive Identity
To Shift from One Identity to Another Identity
To Engage in a Grandiose or Manic State of Self
Process of Self-Fragmentation in Grandiose Hallucination and Delusion
Stage 5: Formation of Grandiose Delusive Self-Identity by Transformation of Delusive Parental Imago
Stage 5A: GS2 + BS2 + BO2 Begins to Cover Up GS1 + BS1 + BO2
Stage 5B: GS2 Is Gradually Transformed to Form DelGS as BO2 is Gradually Transformed to DelGO
Stage 5C: Transformation of Delusive Narcissism
Stage 6: Shifting from One Delusively Grandiose Self-Identity to Another One
Stage 6A: Delusive Voices Arguing with One Another
Stage 6B: Creating Another Delusively Grandiose Self-identity
Stage 6C: Shifting from One Delusive Self-Identity to Another
Stage 7: Further Fragmentation and Confusions of Partial Self Systems
Dilemmas in Self Fragmentation and Grandiose Delusion and Hallucination
Dilemma in Self-Splitting versus Self-Cohesion
Dilemma in Self-Concealment versus Self-Visibility.
Dilemma of Self-Destruction versus Self-Preservation
Conclusion: Implications to Intervention and Recovery
Chapter 4
Catatonic Stupor and Fixation in People with Schizophrenia: A Dilemma of Existence and Non-Existence from External Threat
Natures and Definitions of Catatonia
History of Catatonia
Definitions of Catatonia
Catatonia and Mental Illness
Prevalence of Catatonia in Mental Illness
Catatonic Behaviors in Adult and Childhood Mental Problems
Catatonia in Schizophrenia
Natures and Diagnosis of Catatonic Schizophrenia
Sense of Insecurity and Urgency in Catatonic Schizophrenia
Development of Volition in Catatonia
Strict and Demanding Parents and Prevailing Guilt
Blind Acceptance and Inertia
Negativism and Resistance
Retreat versus Attention to External Environment
Delusive and Unrealistic Interpretation of the External Environment
Residual Sense of Reality and Response
Sense of Existence in Catatonic Schizophrenia
Catatonic State as a Manipulation of False Self by Inner Self
Catatonic Delusion as a Form of Self Paced Autonomy
Catatonic State in Self-Fragmentation: A Case Illustration
Conclusion: Implications for Clinical Practice
Chapter 5
Interchange and Shifting among Paranoid, Grandiose, and Catatonic Delusions and Hallucinations: Interpretation and Recovery
A Case Illustration: Transformation among Paranoid, Grandiose, and Catatonic Delusion and Hallucination
Related Negative Emotions
Case Illustration: John, the Righteousness Protector (Flying Fox in Snow Mountain)
Mental Energy, Self Consciousness, Sense of Reality, Social Functioning in Paranoid, Grandiose, and Catatonic Delusion and Hallucination
Self Esteem and Mental Energy
Sense of Reality
Sense of Self Consciousness.
Social Functioning
Table 5. A Summary of Related Difference among Paranoid, Grandiose and Catatonic Delusions and Hallucination
Theoretical Assumptions about Transformation among Paranoid, Grandiose, and Catatonic Delusion and Hallucination
Five Different Assumptions of Catatonic Delusion in Relation to Paranoid and Grandiose Delusion
Assumptions, 1, 3 and 4 Should Put Together
Different Types of Combinations of Catatonic, Grandiose, and Paranoid Delusion
Type 1: Catatonic Stupor and Excitement in Paranoid Delusions and Hallucination (CatParDel)
Type 2: Catatonic Stupor and Excitement from Paranoid to Grandiose Delusions and Hallucinations (CatParGranDel)
Type 3: Catatonic Stupor and Excitement in Grandiose Delusions and Hallucinations (CatGranDel)
Four Subtypes of Catatonic State in Relation to Paranoid and Grandiose Delusion
Type 4: Catatonic Stupor and Excitement Facilitating the Change from Grandiose Delusions and Hallucinations to Paranoid Delusion and Hallucinations (CatGranParDel)
Chapter 6
Diagnosis and Etiology of Negative Symptoms in Schizophrenia: Critics of Cognitive Deficit and Impairment
Diagnosis and Etiology of Negative Symptoms
Prevalence of Negative Symptoms
Definitions, Description and Measurement of Negative Symptoms
Kay's Definition and Measurement of Negative Symptoms
Andreasen's Definition of Negative Symptoms
Alogia
Avolition
Anhedonia
Affective Flattening
Poor Attention
Implications of Kay's PANSS and Andreasen's SANS
Kraepelin's Praecox-Feelings and Negative Symptoms
Critics of Cognitive Impairment in Negative Symptoms
NIMH-MATRICS Consensus Statement on Negative Symptoms
Negative Symptoms and Cognitive Deficits: A Weak Correlation
Model 1: Cognitive Impairment and Negative Symptoms Are the Same.
Model 2: Negative Symptoms and Cognitive Impairment are Separate Domains but with Similar Etiological Factors.
Notes:
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
9781536133240
1536133248
OCLC:
1063896588

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