SDT
SDT
The diathesis stress model views psychological disease as the result of the interaction between a
person's vulnerability for a disorder and stress. A susceptible individual may never manifest a mental
illness until he encounters a type or degree of stress that is enough to trigger it. It seeks to explain
how different people may respond differently to the same source of stress.
The Theory
The diatheses stress model is one of several theories used over decades to try to understand and
explain the complexities of psychological illnesses such as schizophrenia and depression. This model
believes that people develop a psychological disorder in response to stress because they have an
underlying predisposition to the disease.
This underlying vulnerability (diathesis) comes from genetics, or biologic predisposing factors.
Environmental stresses interact with the diathesis to trigger a psychological disease in a person.
In this theory, neither predisposition nor stress alone can trigger mental illness, rather, stress triggers
the diathesis and both interact in some way to manifest the disease state. The more vulnerable a
person is and the lower his threshold, the less stress it takes to trigger a disorder.
Individual Variation
Vulnerability explains why one person may develop depression or a major psychiatric disorder while
another does not, even though they encounter the same stress. Because the level of diathesis and
resilience varies from one person to the other, people vary in how they respond.
The Predisposition
The diathesis or vulnerability to a psychological disorder lies quiet until a person encounters stresses
in his environment. Diathesis factors can include:
Biologic, such as oxygen deprivation at birth or poor nutrition during early childhood
Part of the theory is that everyone has a certain level of vulnerability and a certain threshold for a
stress to trigger disease. The more vulnerable you are and the lower your threshold, the more likely
that a mental disorder will manifest.
Stress Factors
Stress factors that can interact with a person's predisposition for psychological disease can range
from mild to major stressors and include:
Protective environmental factors can modify the interaction between diathesis and stress. Your
protective factors, or resilience, can prevent a mental illness. An individual's modifying factors might
include:
Family nurturing
These protective factors can dampen negative interactions between stressors and vulnerability in an
individual.
History
The term "diathesis-model" was first used in the 1960s as a theory to explain schizophrenia but has
since come to be applied to other psychological conditions such as:
Depression
Anxiety disorders
Manic-depressive disorder
Alcoholism
Sexual dysfunction
Personality disorders
Eating disorders
The model is now being applied to looking for modifications in genes that would explain genetic
susceptibility to disease