Disaster Psychiatry Indian Medical PG Practice Questions and MCQs
Practice Indian Medical PG questions for Disaster Psychiatry. These multiple choice questions (MCQs) cover important concepts and help you prepare for your exams.
Disaster Psychiatry Indian Medical PG Question 1: In immediate disaster response management (first 24-48 hours), which of the following is not typically practiced?
- A. Rehabilitation
- B. Triage
- C. Mass vaccination (Correct Answer)
- D. Search and rescue
Disaster Psychiatry Explanation: ***Mass vaccination***
- **Mass vaccination** is typically a strategy for **preparedness/prevention phase** or **post-disaster disease prevention**, not an immediate disaster response activity.
- Immediate disaster response focuses on **saving lives, providing emergency medical care, establishing shelter, and restoring critical infrastructure**, rather than large-scale preventative health campaigns.
- Mass vaccination requires **planning, logistics, cold chain management**, which are incompatible with chaotic immediate response scenarios.
*Triage*
- **Triage** is a **critical and immediate** component of disaster response, involving the **prioritization of injured patients** for treatment based on severity and survival likelihood.
- It ensures limited resources are allocated effectively to **maximize lives saved** during the acute phase.
- Typically uses **color-coded tags** (red-immediate, yellow-delayed, green-minor, black-deceased).
*Rehabilitation*
- While **rehabilitation** is part of the **recovery phase** (weeks to months post-disaster), **early rehabilitation activities** may begin during the immediate response period.
- Basic rehabilitation services like **mobility aids, psychological first aid**, can be initiated alongside acute care.
- This makes it partially practiced even in immediate response, unlike mass vaccination which is never immediate.
*Search and rescue*
- **Search and rescue** is the **primary immediate response activity**, focusing on locating and extracting survivors from disaster-affected areas.
- Time-critical operation following the **"golden period"** principle where survival rates decrease rapidly after 72 hours.
- Involves specialized teams with equipment for **debris removal, victim location, and emergency extraction**.
Disaster Psychiatry Indian Medical PG Question 2: Which of the following disorders is classified under somatic symptom and related disorders in the DSM-5?
- A. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
- B. Phobic disorders (e.g., social anxiety disorder)
- C. Conversion disorder (functional neurological symptom disorder) (Correct Answer)
- D. Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
Disaster Psychiatry Explanation: ***Conversion disorder (functional neurological symptom disorder)***
- **Conversion disorder** is characterized by neurological symptoms (e.g., paralysis, blindness) that are **incompatible with recognized neurological or medical conditions**, yet are not intentionally produced.
- It falls under **somatic symptom and related disorders** because the primary features are physical symptoms causing distress or functional impairment, rather than being malingered or feigned.
*Phobic disorders (e.g., social anxiety disorder)*
- **Phobic disorders** are classified under **anxiety disorders** in the DSM-5, not somatic symptom and related disorders.
- They are primarily characterized by **intense, irrational fears** of specific objects or situations, leading to avoidance rather than prominent physical symptoms without a medical cause.
*Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)*
- **PTSD** is classified under **trauma- and stressor-related disorders** in the DSM-5, distinguished by symptoms developing after exposure to a traumatic event.
- Its core features include **intrusive memories, avoidance, negative alterations in cognition and mood, and alterations in arousal and reactivity**, rather than unexplained physical symptoms.
*Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)*
- **OCD** is classified under **obsessive-compulsive and related disorders** in the DSM-5.
- It is primarily characterized by the presence of **obsessions (recurrent, intrusive thoughts)** and/or **compulsions (repetitive behaviors or mental acts)**, which are distinct from somatic symptoms.
Disaster Psychiatry Indian Medical PG Question 3: You are working in a primary health center (PHC) situated in a high seismic zone. Which of the following actions should you take as part of preparedness for an emergency?
- A. Ensure all financial and other resources are available for disaster preparedness.
- B. Increase public awareness through campaigns and loudspeakers.
- C. Follow instructions given over the phone or radio by higher officials.
- D. Conduct a simulation for the disaster and assess the response. (Correct Answer)
Disaster Psychiatry Explanation: ***Conduct a simulation for the disaster and assess the response.***
- **Simulation exercises** are crucial for testing the effectiveness of a disaster preparedness plan and identifying weaknesses in the response system.
- This allows for refinement of protocols, training of personnel, and ensuring that all team members understand their roles during an actual emergency.
*Ensure all financial and other resources are available for disaster preparedness.*
- While important for effective disaster management, simply "ensuring" resources are available is not an action of preparedness, but rather an **enabling condition**.
- This statement focuses on the availability of resources rather than a proactive step to prepare the PHC for an emergency.
*Increase public awareness through campaigns and loudspeakers.*
- **Public awareness campaigns** are vital for community preparedness, but this action is primarily for the general population and not a specific preparedness action for the PHC itself in terms of its operational readiness.
- While a PHC might be involved in public awareness, its core preparedness involves internal actions to ensure its functionality during a disaster.
*Follow instructions given over the phone or radio by higher officials.*
- This describes a reaction during or immediately before a disaster, rather than a proactive **preparedness measure**.
- Relying solely on real-time instructions from higher officials during an emergency without prior planning can lead to delays and inefficiencies.
Disaster Psychiatry Indian Medical PG Question 4: Post-traumatic stress disorder is characterized by all except:
- A. Flashback and nightmare
- B. Re-experiencing stressful events
- C. Exposure to traumatic events
- D. It doesn't develop after 6 months of stress (Correct Answer)
Disaster Psychiatry Explanation: ***It doesn't develop after 6 months of stress***
- This statement is **FALSE** and is therefore the correct answer to this "EXCEPT" question.
- **PTSD can develop at any time** following a traumatic event, including months or even years later - there is no upper time limit for symptom onset.
- The **DSM-5 includes a "delayed expression" specifier** for cases where full diagnostic criteria are not met until at least 6 months after the trauma.
- While most cases develop within **3 months of the traumatic event**, delayed onset is well-documented and clinically recognized.
- This distinguishes PTSD from **Acute Stress Disorder**, which by definition occurs within 3 days to 4 weeks after trauma exposure.
*Flashback and nightmare*
- **Flashbacks** (dissociative reactions where the person feels the traumatic event is recurring) and **nightmares** are core symptoms of PTSD.
- These belong to the **re-experiencing/intrusion symptom cluster** (Criterion B in DSM-5).
- These involuntary recollections cause significant distress and are hallmark features of the disorder.
*Re-experiencing stressful events*
- **Re-experiencing symptoms** are one of the four main symptom clusters required for PTSD diagnosis.
- This includes intrusive memories, traumatic nightmares, flashbacks, and intense psychological/physiological reactions to trauma reminders.
- These symptoms reflect the **inability to integrate the traumatic memory** properly, leading to involuntary reactivation.
*Exposure to traumatic events*
- **Criterion A: Exposure to actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence** is the essential prerequisite for PTSD diagnosis.
- This exposure can be through direct experience, witnessing, learning it happened to a close other, or repeated/extreme exposure to aversive details.
- Without documented trauma exposure, PTSD cannot be diagnosed regardless of symptom presentation.
Disaster Psychiatry Indian Medical PG Question 5: Which of the following is not a clinical feature of post-traumatic stress disorder?
- A. Grandiosity (Correct Answer)
- B. Emotional distress
- C. Flashbacks
- D. Nightmares
Disaster Psychiatry Explanation: ***Grandiosity***
- **Grandiosity** refers to an inflated sense of self-importance, superiority, or special abilities, which is characteristic of manic or hypomanic episodes in bipolar disorder, not PTSD.
- PTSD typically involves negative alterations in cognition and mood, including persistent negative beliefs about oneself (e.g., "I am bad," "I can't trust anyone"), which is opposite to grandiose thinking.
- The core symptoms of PTSD do not include elevated mood, inflated self-esteem, or grandiose delusions.
*Flashbacks*
- **Flashbacks** are a hallmark feature of PTSD, involving vivid, intrusive re-experiences of the traumatic event where the individual feels as if the trauma is happening again.
- They are a key symptom in the **intrusion cluster (Criterion B)** of DSM-5 PTSD diagnostic criteria.
- Flashbacks can involve sensory, emotional, or physical re-experiencing with dissociative qualities.
*Nightmares*
- **Nightmares** related to the traumatic event are a common and distressing feature of PTSD, falling under the **intrusion symptom cluster (Criterion B)**.
- They often involve re-enacting the trauma or experiencing themes related to its content, leading to sleep disturbance and significant emotional distress.
- Trauma-related nightmares occur in the majority of PTSD patients and contribute to sleep avoidance.
*Emotional distress*
- **Emotional distress** is a pervasive symptom in PTSD, including intense anxiety, fear, sadness, anger, or irritability.
- This distress appears across multiple symptom clusters: **intrusion (Criterion B)**, **negative alterations in cognition and mood (Criterion D)**, and **alterations in arousal and reactivity (Criterion E)**.
- Emotional distress can be triggered by trauma reminders (internal or external cues) and is a core feature of the disorder.
Disaster Psychiatry Indian Medical PG Question 6: A 1st year medical student presents with recurrent episodes of choking sensation, breathlessness, intense sweating along with feeling of impending doom. Usually the episodes occur prior to exams. What is the most likely diagnosis?
- A. Panic attack (Correct Answer)
- B. Acute stress disorder
- C. Generalised anxiety disorder
- D. Phobia
Disaster Psychiatry Explanation: ***Panic attack (Panic Disorder)***
- The sudden onset of intense fear or discomfort, along with symptoms like **choking sensation**, **breathlessness**, **sweating**, and **feeling of impending doom**, are characteristic of a **panic attack**.
- The **recurrent episodes** occurring prior to exams indicate **Panic Disorder**, which is defined by recurrent unexpected panic attacks followed by persistent concern about future attacks.
- The situational trigger (exams) suggests a pattern consistent with panic disorder, where attacks may be situationally predisposed.
*Acute stress disorder*
- This condition occurs within **one month of exposure to a traumatic event** and involves dissociative symptoms, intrusions, avoidance, and arousal symptoms.
- The patient describes recurrent episodes tied to exams, not a single acute traumatic event with subsequent stress response.
*Generalised anxiety disorder*
- Characterized by excessive and **uncontrollable worry** about various events or activities for **at least six months**.
- While anxiety is present, the sudden, intense, **episodic nature** of symptoms with a distinct "feeling of impending doom" points away from the chronic, pervasive worry of GAD.
- GAD presents with chronic anxiety rather than discrete panic episodes.
*Phobia*
- A phobia is an **irrational and intense fear** of a specific object or situation (e.g., specific phobia) or social situations (social anxiety disorder).
- While exam-related anxiety can be severe, the description points to a **full-blown panic response** with multiple autonomic symptoms (choking, breathlessness, sweating) and psychological distress (impending doom).
- Unlike a phobia where avoidance is the primary feature, this patient experiences discrete panic episodes with characteristic somatic symptoms.
Disaster Psychiatry Indian Medical PG Question 7: Flooding is a psychological treatment modality used in which of the following?
- A. Phobia (Correct Answer)
- B. Depression
- C. Mania
- D. Schizophrenia
Disaster Psychiatry Explanation: ***Phobia***
- **Flooding** is a specific type of **exposure therapy** that involves immediate and intense exposure to the feared object or situation for a prolonged period, without the possibility of escape.
- This technique is primarily used to overcome **phobias** and other **anxiety disorders** by breaking the association between the feared stimulus and the anxiety response.
*Depression*
- Treatment for **depression** typically involves a combination of **pharmacotherapy** (antidepressants) and **psychotherapy**, such as cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) or interpersonal therapy.
- While exposure techniques exist for some aspects of depression (e.g., social anxiety in depressive contexts), **flooding** is not a primary or standalone treatment modality for core depressive symptoms.
*Mania*
- **Mania**, a characteristic feature of **bipolar disorder**, is primarily treated with **mood stabilizers** (e.g., lithium, valproate) and sometimes antipsychotics.
- Psychological interventions focus on **psychoeducation**, symptom monitoring, and adherence to medication, rather than exposure-based therapies like flooding.
*Schizophrenia*
- The primary treatment for **schizophrenia** involves **antipsychotic medications** to manage psychotic symptoms like hallucinations and delusions.
- Psychological therapies, such as **cognitive-behavioral therapy for psychosis (CBTp)** and **family therapy**, aim to improve coping skills, reduce distress, and enhance social functioning, but **flooding** is not an appropriate or effective treatment.
Disaster Psychiatry Indian Medical PG Question 8: What is the correct chronological order in the disaster management cycle?
- A. Impact → Response → Rehabilitation → Mitigation
- B. Response → Rehabilitation → Mitigation → Impact
- C. Rehabilitation → Mitigation → Response → Impact
- D. Mitigation → Impact → Response → Rehabilitation (Correct Answer)
Disaster Psychiatry Explanation: ***Mitigation → Impact → Response → Rehabilitation***
- Among the given options, this represents the most **logical chronological sequence** in disaster management
- **Mitigation** (risk reduction) occurs before a disaster as preventive measures
- **Impact** represents the disaster event occurrence (though technically not a "management phase" but the event itself)
- **Response** involves immediate emergency actions during and after the disaster
- **Rehabilitation** encompasses recovery and long-term rebuilding efforts
- **Note:** The standard disaster management cycle typically includes Mitigation → Preparedness → Response → Recovery, but this option best represents the temporal flow among the choices provided
*Impact → Response → Rehabilitation → Mitigation*
- Incorrectly places **Impact** first, ignoring that **mitigation** activities occur before disasters as preventive measures
- Places **Mitigation** at the end rather than as an ongoing proactive process
*Response → Rehabilitation → Mitigation → Impact*
- Illogical sequence starting with **Response** before any disaster has occurred
- Places **Impact** at the end, which contradicts the temporal nature of disaster occurrence
- Fails to recognize mitigation as a preventive stage
*Rehabilitation → Mitigation → Response → Impact*
- Completely inverted sequence starting with **Rehabilitation** before a disaster has occurred
- Does not follow the natural chronological progression of disaster events and management activities
- Positions response and impact in an illogical order
Disaster Psychiatry Indian Medical PG Question 9: A patient with a history of RTA before 2 months presents with complaints of dreams of accidents. He is able to visualize the same scene whenever he visits the place. Hence is afraid to go back to the accident site. Identify the type of disorder that he might be suffering from?
- A. PTSD (Correct Answer)
- B. Anxiety disorder
- C. Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
- D. Adjustment disorder
Disaster Psychiatry Explanation: ***PTSD***
- The patient's symptoms, including **recurrent dreams** of the accident, **intrusive memories** triggered by the accident site, and **avoidance** of the location, are classic diagnostic criteria for **Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)**.
- PTSD often develops after exposure to a **traumatic event** like a car accident, with symptoms lasting for more than one month.
*Anxiety disorder*
- While anxiety is a prominent feature of PTSD, **Generalized Anxiety Disorder** typically involves excessive worry about everyday events rather than a specific traumatic incident.
- Other anxiety disorders like **panic disorder** involve sudden, intense fear without the specific re-experiencing and avoidance symptoms seen here.
*Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)*
- OCD is characterized by repetitive, unwanted thoughts (**obsessions**) and ritualistic behaviors (**compulsions**) performed to reduce anxiety, which are not described in this patient's presentation.
- The patient's distress stems from a past trauma, not from obsessions or compulsions.
*Adjustment disorder*
- An adjustment disorder occurs in response to a **stressor**, but the symptoms are typically less severe and do not include the full constellation of **re-experiencing, avoidance, and hyperarousal** seen in PTSD.
- An adjustment disorder resolves within 6 months of the stressor or its consequences, however, the persistence and nature of the symptoms here point to a more severe trauma-related condition.
Disaster Psychiatry Indian Medical PG Question 10: Which of the following is false regarding parasuicide?
- A. Also known as attempted suicide.
- B. Mostly seen in psychological disturbances.
- C. A conscious, impulsive, manipulative act to get rid of an intolerable situation.
- D. Hanging is the most common form. (Correct Answer)
Disaster Psychiatry Explanation: **Explanation:**
**Parasuicide** (also known as Deliberate Self-Harm) refers to a non-fatal act in which an individual deliberately causes self-injury or ingests a substance in excess of the prescribed dosage.
**Why Option D is the correct answer (False statement):**
Hanging is the most common method used in **completed suicides**, not parasuicide. In parasuicide, the intent is often not to die but to communicate distress or manipulate a situation. Therefore, the methods chosen are usually less lethal and allow for intervention. The most common method of parasuicide is **self-poisoning** (e.g., drug overdose or pesticide ingestion) or **superficial wrist cutting**.
**Analysis of other options:**
* **Option A:** Parasuicide is synonymous with **attempted suicide**, though the term is specifically used for acts where the intent to die is low or ambiguous.
* **Option B:** It is frequently seen in individuals with **psychological disturbances**, most notably **Borderline Personality Disorder**, depression, and substance abuse.
* **Option C:** It is often a **conscious and impulsive act**. It is frequently described as "manipulative" (or a "cry for help") because the goal is often to escape an intolerable emotional state or to influence the behavior of others.
**High-Yield Clinical Pearls for NEET-PG:**
* **Gender:** Parasuicide is more common in **females**, whereas completed suicide is more common in **males** (Gender Paradox).
* **Age:** Most common in the younger age group (15–30 years).
* **Strongest Predictor:** A previous history of parasuicide is the strongest predictor of a future completed suicide.
* **SAD PERSONS Scale:** Used to assess the risk of suicide in clinical settings.
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