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Culture-Specific Diagnoses and Their Relationship to Mood Disorders
Culture-Specific Diagnoses and Their Relationship to Mood Disorders

... syndromes and psychiatric disorders is complex and still needs considerable research. Our position is that DSM and ICD categories do not easily subsume most culture-specific diagnoses, although such syndromes are sometimes closely associated with psychiatric diagnoses in what may be termed a comorbi ...
Cluttering: Diagnosis and Therapy Guidelines
Cluttering: Diagnosis and Therapy Guidelines

...  St. Louis, K. and Hinzman, A. (1986) Studies of cluttering: Perceptions of cluttering by speech-language pathologists and educators. Journal of Fluency Disorders, 11, 131-149.  St. Louis, K., Hinzman, A., and Hull, F. (1985). Studies of cluttering: Disfluency and language measures in young possib ...
(007-017) Rafanelli 27-1:(119
(007-017) Rafanelli 27-1:(119

... patients with various medical illnesses received a diagnosis of demoralization according to DCPR criteria. These results confirm that demoralization is frequent across different medical settings. The first cluster (demoralization and comorbid depression) encompassed about 30% of cases. This is not a ...
When Munchausen Becomes Malingering: Factitious Disorders That
When Munchausen Becomes Malingering: Factitious Disorders That

... several stories of male patients sexually harassing or molesting her. Later psychiatric history included an episode in which she had fallen at her work as a nurse's aid and injured her neck and head. At that time she was regarded as having a postconcussive head injury with substantial cognitive impa ...
Mapping the manuals of madness: Comparing the ICD
Mapping the manuals of madness: Comparing the ICD

... Properties of the ICD-10 network and its giant component were calculated and compared to those of the DSM-IV-TR network as reported by Borsboom et al. (2011). We give a short overview of the network properties we investigated. Node degree is a measure of centrality defined as the total number of dire ...
View/Open - University of Lethbridge
View/Open - University of Lethbridge

... A phenomenological-hermeneutic approach was used to research men's experience with attempting to achieve an 'ideal' masculine body. The current North American 'ideal' male body, media and cultural influences, a continuum of exercise and dieting behaviors, steroid use, addictions, eating disorders, a ...
Autism Spectrum Disorders - Illinois State Board of Education
Autism Spectrum Disorders - Illinois State Board of Education

... important, for these students provide models of appropriate language, social, and behavioral skills. Consistency and continuity are very important for children with an ASD, and ...
Signs and Symptoms of Mental Illness
Signs and Symptoms of Mental Illness

... DSM-5 is striving to be more etiological-however disorders are caused by a complex interaction of multiple factors and various etiological factors can present with the same symptom pattern The diagnostic groups have been reshuffled There is a dimensional component to the categories Emphasis was to b ...
Vanessa Gallegos - Bipolar I: The Causes and the Unknown
Vanessa Gallegos - Bipolar I: The Causes and the Unknown

... overlapping white matter deficits in regions usually occupied by major longitudinal and interhemispheric tracts. Structurally, the brain of a person suffering from bipolar disorder had anatomical abnormalities in the white matter regions (5). ...
Rohrbauck MP 2012 - Adler Graduate School
Rohrbauck MP 2012 - Adler Graduate School

... themselves but do they do it to obtain a position of superiority over others or do they recognize the demands of communal life and align their goals with the goals of society? We are all socially embedded, and ultimately all problems are social problems. You will find that those who are mentally ill ...
- Journal of Affective Disorders
- Journal of Affective Disorders

... Method: A random, national sample of psychiatrists and clinical psychologists (n ¼1201) described a randomly selected current patient with personality pathology using the descriptors in the Shedler– Westen Assessment Procedure‐II (SWAP‐II), completed assessments of patients' adaptive functioning, an ...
Psychological Disorders
Psychological Disorders

... 3. Emotional distress. States of emotional distress, such as anxiety or depression, are considered abnormal when inappropriate, excessive, or prolonged relative to the person’s situation. 4. Maladaptive behavior. Behavior is maladaptive when it causes personal distress, is self-defeating, or is asso ...
Parasomnias - MetroHealth
Parasomnias - MetroHealth

... Sleep Terrors. Sleep terrors are the most extreme and dramatic form of the arousal disorders and are the most distressing to witness. A sleep terror episode often begins with a "bloodcurdling" scream or shout, and may produce signs that suggest extreme terror, such as dilated pupils, rapid breathing ...
File
File

... victims of chronic schizophrenia don’t recover. On other occasions it appears suddenly, to previously mentally healthy individuals, and usually because of stress. This method of development is called acute schizophrenia, and its victims are more susceptible to psychiatric drugs and treatment. Schizo ...
Psych Disorders new edition powerpoint
Psych Disorders new edition powerpoint

... – Describe contemporary and historical conceptions of what constitutes psychological disorders. – Discuss the intersection between psychology and the legal system. – Evaluate the strengths and limitations of various approaches to explaining psychological disorders: medical model, psychoanalytic, hum ...
Chapter 11 Teachers 1. Personality disorders consist of a loosely
Chapter 11 Teachers 1. Personality disorders consist of a loosely

... 44. Persistent and aggressive behaviour before the age of 11-years is also a good predictor of APD in adulthood. Which of the following is also a good predictor? a. low IQ b. low self-esteem c. early fighting d. All of the above (A) ...
Delusional Disorder
Delusional Disorder

... What Is the Outlook for People With Delusional Disorder? The outlook for people with delusional disorder varies depending on the person, the type of delusional disorder, and the person’s life circumstances, including the availability of support and a willingness to stick with treatment. Delusional d ...
ppt - Licensed Professional Counselors Association of Georgia
ppt - Licensed Professional Counselors Association of Georgia

... standardization throughout all disciplines that address mental health concerns: medical, nursing, psychiatric, psychological, counseling, social work, marriage and family therapy • Accurate diagnosis allows for common ground to be established in terms of research concerning the effectiveness of vari ...
Highlights of Changes from DSM-IV-TR to DSM-5
Highlights of Changes from DSM-IV-TR to DSM-5

... In DSM-IV, there was an exclusion criterion for a major depressive episode that was applied to depressive symptoms lasting less than 2 months following the death of a loved one (i.e., the bereavement exclusion). This exclusion is omitted in DSM-5 for several reasons. The first is to remove the impli ...
Anxiety Disorders
Anxiety Disorders

... notable for ruminations, obsessions, worries, concerns regarding danger (doesn’t include psychotic symptoms, and if suicidal ideation present, look for comorbid depression) ...
Untitled - Sacramento - California State University
Untitled - Sacramento - California State University

... challenge in treating individuals with negative body image is the range of diversity in clients as not all clients will respond to certain interventions when compared with others (Kaminski, Chapman, Hayes, & Owen, 2005). The value of thinness and muscularity in Western culture is presented through t ...
Between 1 and 2% of adults have avoidant personality disorder
Between 1 and 2% of adults have avoidant personality disorder

... or occupational functioning, or when it causes personal distress ...
A Case Study Illustrating the Interplay Between
A Case Study Illustrating the Interplay Between

... About herself she said that “I hate to be what I am right now”; that she was sad nearly all the time and that she only trusted her friend Anita. Also, Isabel evidenced a strong preoccupation with her physical appearance. She wrote that she wanted to be a famous model, that her most important wish wa ...
dissociation 2 day workshop flyer Kennedy
dissociation 2 day workshop flyer Kennedy

... Dissociation can be understood as psychological processes which result in the inhibition of normal associations. Disturbances of perception, experience and identity can be formulated as involving these processes. ...
[1] - mrsjanis
[1] - mrsjanis

... * when physical illness is largely psychological in origin ...
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Eating disorder

Eating disorders are mental illnesses defined by abnormal eating habits that negatively affect a person's physical or mental health. They include binge eating disorder where people eat a large amount in a short period of time, anorexia nervosa where people eat very little and thus have a low body weight, bulimia nervosa where people eat a lot and then try to rid themselves of the food, pica where people eat non-food items, rumination disorder where people regurgitate food, avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder where people have a lack of interest in food, and a group of other specified feeding or eating disorders. Anxiety disorders, depression, and substance abuse are common among people with eating disorders. These disorders do not include obesity.The cause of eating disorders is not clear. Both genetic and environmental factors appear to play a role. Cultural idealization of thinness is believed to contribute. Eating disorders for example affect about 12% of dancers. Those who have experienced sexual abuse are also more likely to develop eating disorders. Some disorders such as pica and rumination disorder occur more often in people with intellectual disabilities. Only one eating disorder can be diagnosed at a given time.Treatment can be effective for many eating disorders. This typically involves counselling, a proper diet, and the reduction of efforts to eliminate food. Hospitalization is occasionally needed. Medications may be used to help with some of the associated symptoms. At five years about 70% of people with anorexia and 50% of people with bulimia recover. Recovery from binge eating disorder is less clear and estimated at 20% to 60%. Both anorexia and bulimia increase the risk of death.In the developed world binge eating disorder affects about 1.6% of women and 0.8% of men in a given year. Anorexia affects about 0.4% and bulimia affects about 1.3% of young women in a given year. During the entire life up to 4% of women have anorexia, 2% have bulimia, and 2% have binge eating disorder. Anorexia and bulimia occur nearly ten times more often in females than males. Typically they begin in late childhood or early adulthood. Rates of other eating disorders are not clear. Rates of eating disorders appear to be lower in less developed countries.
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