Book contents
- Evolutionary Psychiatry
- Reviews
- Evolutionary Psychiatry
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Chapter 1 Introduction to Evolutionary Psychiatry
- Chapter 2 The Biopsychosocial Model Advanced by Evolutionary Theory
- Chapter 3 Hominin Evolution I
- Chapter 4 Hominin Evolution II
- Chapter 5 Hunter-Gatherers, Mismatch and Mental Disorder
- Chapter 6 Why Do Mental Disorders Persist?
- Chapter 7 Anxiety Disorders in Evolutionary Perspective
- Chapter 8 Evolutionary Perspectives on Depression
- Chapter 9 On the Randomness of Suicide
- Chapter 10 Evolutionary Perspectives on Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders
- Chapter 11 Evolutionary Perspectives on Eating Disorders
- Chapter 12 Substance Abuse and Evolution
- Chapter 13 The Social Function of Alcohol from an Evolutionary Perspective
- Chapter 14 Evolutionary Perspectives on Childhood Trauma
- Chapter 15 Evolutionary Perspectives on Neurodevelopmental Disorders
- Chapter 16 Maternal Negativity and Child Maltreatment
- Chapter 17 Alzheimer’s Disease as a Disease of Evolutionary Mismatch, with a Focus on Reproductive Life History
- Chapter 18 Psychopharmacology and Evolution
- Chapter 19 What the Evolutionary and Cognitive Sciences Offer the Sciences of Crime and Justice
- Chapter 20 Evolutionary Thinking and Clinical Care of Psychiatric Patients
- Index
- References
Chapter 20 - Evolutionary Thinking and Clinical Care of Psychiatric Patients
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 September 2022
- Evolutionary Psychiatry
- Reviews
- Evolutionary Psychiatry
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Chapter 1 Introduction to Evolutionary Psychiatry
- Chapter 2 The Biopsychosocial Model Advanced by Evolutionary Theory
- Chapter 3 Hominin Evolution I
- Chapter 4 Hominin Evolution II
- Chapter 5 Hunter-Gatherers, Mismatch and Mental Disorder
- Chapter 6 Why Do Mental Disorders Persist?
- Chapter 7 Anxiety Disorders in Evolutionary Perspective
- Chapter 8 Evolutionary Perspectives on Depression
- Chapter 9 On the Randomness of Suicide
- Chapter 10 Evolutionary Perspectives on Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders
- Chapter 11 Evolutionary Perspectives on Eating Disorders
- Chapter 12 Substance Abuse and Evolution
- Chapter 13 The Social Function of Alcohol from an Evolutionary Perspective
- Chapter 14 Evolutionary Perspectives on Childhood Trauma
- Chapter 15 Evolutionary Perspectives on Neurodevelopmental Disorders
- Chapter 16 Maternal Negativity and Child Maltreatment
- Chapter 17 Alzheimer’s Disease as a Disease of Evolutionary Mismatch, with a Focus on Reproductive Life History
- Chapter 18 Psychopharmacology and Evolution
- Chapter 19 What the Evolutionary and Cognitive Sciences Offer the Sciences of Crime and Justice
- Chapter 20 Evolutionary Thinking and Clinical Care of Psychiatric Patients
- Index
- References
Summary
Psychiatric therapeutics is facing a major crisis that originates from its limited efficacy and dubious scientific credibility. Such a crisis requires a radical change in the paradigm that inspires psychiatric research and clinical practice. The new paradigm should integrate in a meaningful way all of the variables that mediate the aetiology and pathogenesis of psychiatric disorders: biological, psychological, developmental, behavioural and social. The essence of the evolutionary study of human psychology and behaviour is just such an integration. Therefore, evolutionary thinking has great potential to improve the clinical care of psychiatric patients. According to a modern view of medicine, the aims of therapy are not only to lessen symptoms and to reverse the pathogenic mechanisms, but also to restore the congruence between a patient’s functional capacities and the conditions of the environment. Evolutionary thinking suggests replacing symptoms with functional capacities as the primary targets of psychiatric treatment. Most mental disorders are conditions of compromised functional capacities. Therapy should aim at improving patients’ capacities necessary to enact behaviours associated with goal achievement. When treating patients, clinicians should distinguish between symptoms caused by dysfunctional mechanisms and symptoms that are adaptive reactions to environmental situations with negative cost–benefit outcomes.
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- Evolutionary PsychiatryCurrent Perspectives on Evolution and Mental Health, pp. 305 - 318Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022
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