Dimensional approach

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Dimensional Approach – to classification of mental disorder Categorically classifying mental disorders focuses on the KIND of problem a person is experiencing. A dimensional approach focuses on the EXTENT in which a person has a disorder. Many disorders (especially personality disorders) are simply normal traits gone too far.

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Page 1: Dimensional approach

Dimensional Approach – to classification of mental disorder

• Categorically classifying mental disorders focuses on the KIND of problem a person is experiencing.

• A dimensional approach focuses on the EXTENT in which a person has a disorder. Many disorders (especially personality disorders) are simply normal traits gone too far.

Page 2: Dimensional approach

Dimensional Approach • Doesn’t place people into

diagnostic categories. • Places people in dimensions

(sometimes seen as dimensions of personality)

• Diagnosis, then, becomes not a process of deciding the presence or absence of a symptom or disorder, but rather, the degree to which particular characteristic is present.

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Dimensional approach• Instead of making judgments

of "present or not?", the dimensional approach asks the question "how much?"

• Ranks disorder on a continuum based on testing following participants completing inventories (standardised testing)

• A dimension viewed as a cluster of related psychological/behavioural characteristics that occur together

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Dimensional approach• Thus statistics (profiles) can

be generated for the population and

• values are compared with the statistically ‘normal’ expected values for each characteristic – e.g.

• neuroticism, psychoticism, introversion-extroversion

• novelty seeking, harm avoidance, reward dependence

• positive emotionality, negative emotionality, constraint

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Grading & Transitional• Patient is profiled by grading

the severity of symptoms from a number of dimensions in comparison to the population e.g. anxiety, variations in mood, etc.

• Symptoms can be monitored over time (Transitional) – to determine the effectiveness of treatment.

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Strengths• generates richer data i.e. we get

more detail of a case by case approach for individual patient’s

• A dimensional approach would be better able to capture the complexities of a person’s life that a categorical approach would miss.

• Classifies disorder on its severity (not just presence)

• Stigma’s from labeling are less likely to occur – i.e. ‘she is highly anxious’ (not she has ‘borderline personality disorder’

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Weaknesses• Complexity & lack of uniformity in mental health

profession.• Particularly given the number of dimensions that

need to be rated.