Publication | Open Access
A Heuristic Vulnerability/Stress Model of Schizophrenic Episodes
1K
Citations
72
References
1984
Year
Vulnerability FactorsPsychotic EpisodesTentative ModelPsychological Co-morbiditiesPsychopathologyRisk PredictionPsychiatryPsychotic DisorderHeuristic Vulnerability/stress ModelEnvironmental FactorsSchizophreniaSocial SciencesBiological PsychiatryPsychiatric DisorderMedicinePsychosisPsychology
Schizophrenic episodes arise when information‑processing deficits, autonomic anomalies, and social coping limitations interact with life‑event and social‑environmental stressors. The study proposes a heuristic vulnerability/stress model that distinguishes stable vulnerability indicators, mediating factors, and episode indicators to explain schizophrenic psychotic episodes and highlights unresolved questions.
A tentative model of schizophrenic psychotic episodes is presented, based on the evidence that certain characteristics of individuals may serve as vulnerability factors and that environmental stressors may precipitate psychotic periods in vulnerable individuals. Certain information-processing deficits, autonomic reactivity anomalies, and social competence and coping limitations are viewed as potential vulnerability factors. Stressors in the form of discrete life events as well as the prevailing level of social environmental stress are seen as factors that interact with preexisting vulnerability characteristics to produce vicious circles, which lead, in turn, to psychotic episodes. A distinction among stable vulnerability indicators, mediating vulnerability factors, and episode indicators is suggested to differentiate types of abnormalities that characterize individuals prone to or manifesting schizophrenic disorder. Some major areas of unresolved questions in relation to this view of schizophrenic psychotic episodes are discussed.
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