• Study Resource
  • Explore Categories
    • Arts & Humanities
    • Business
    • Engineering & Technology
    • Foreign Language
    • History
    • Math
    • Science
    • Social Science

    Top subcategories

    • Advanced Math
    • Algebra
    • Basic Math
    • Calculus
    • Geometry
    • Linear Algebra
    • Pre-Algebra
    • Pre-Calculus
    • Statistics And Probability
    • Trigonometry
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Astronomy
    • Astrophysics
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth Science
    • Environmental Science
    • Health Science
    • Physics
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Anthropology
    • Law
    • Political Science
    • Psychology
    • Sociology
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Accounting
    • Economics
    • Finance
    • Management
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Aerospace Engineering
    • Bioengineering
    • Chemical Engineering
    • Civil Engineering
    • Computer Science
    • Electrical Engineering
    • Industrial Engineering
    • Mechanical Engineering
    • Web Design
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Architecture
    • Communications
    • English
    • Gender Studies
    • Music
    • Performing Arts
    • Philosophy
    • Religious Studies
    • Writing
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Ancient History
    • European History
    • US History
    • World History
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Croatian
    • Czech
    • Finnish
    • Greek
    • Hindi
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Persian
    • Swedish
    • Turkish
    • other →
 
Profile Documents Logout
Upload
Anxiety Disorders
Anxiety Disorders

... Example 2: It happened without any warning, a sudden wave of terror. My heart was pounding like mad, I couldn't catch my breath, and the ground underfoot seemed unstable. I was sure it was a heart attack. It was the worst experience of my life. Example 3: I can't tell you why I'm afraid of rats. The ...
MINISTRY of HEALTH UKRAINE
MINISTRY of HEALTH UKRAINE

... 1. ACTUALITY OF THEME: Doctors see many patients with emotional or other symptoms that are reactions to stressful experiences. Although such reactions in most cases are not severe enough to be diagnosed as mental disorders, they are distressing enough to require help and, if no help is given, they m ...
12341
12341

... CFS: A Distinct Diagnostic Entity? QUESTION: • Debate regarding whether CFS differs from somatic depression, somatic anxiety, fibromyalgia, and irritable bowel syndrome. • Are these disorders better explained as a single unitary construct of functional somatic distress (somatoform disorders)? METHO ...
Borderline Personality Disorder EXPLAINED
Borderline Personality Disorder EXPLAINED

... so to speak, no emotional skin. Even the slightest touch or movement can create immense suffering." Marsha Linehan, Ph. D. ( developed Dialectical Behavioral Therapy) 1. INTERPERSONAL DYSREGULATION Frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment. The perception of impending separation or rejec ...
DEFENSE MECHANISMS AS MODERATORS OF TRAUMA
DEFENSE MECHANISMS AS MODERATORS OF TRAUMA

... functioning in relation to others, is through its impact on affect regulation (Pynoos et al., 1995). Affect regulation refers to conscious and unconscious ways in which individuals control their emotional experiences in order to meet certain goals (Thompson, 1994). As they develop, children are incr ...
Do dissociative disorders exist in Northern Ireland?: Blind
Do dissociative disorders exist in Northern Ireland?: Blind

... acteristics of personality disorders are common in dissociative disorders10,31,32. Studies have begun to address dissociative disorders in Northern Ireland, and clinicians’ attitudes towards them. Dorahy and Lewis33 found that the existence of DID was generally accepted by Northern Irish clinicians ...
Torture survivors: What to ask, how to document
Torture survivors: What to ask, how to document

... early half of the world’s 200 nations torture their citizens.1 Although survivors have high rates of physical and psychiatric morbidity, and in coming to this country tend to live in highly concentrated refugee groups, physicians rarely discover torture histories.2,3 Torture survivors may avoid spea ...
AP6_Lecture_Ch07
AP6_Lecture_Ch07

... Chapter 7 Somatoform and Dissociative Disorders ...
ppt - Licensed Professional Counselors Association of Georgia
ppt - Licensed Professional Counselors Association of Georgia

... • Diagnoses must be used cautiously in cross-cultural cases • Diagnosis must be made based upon what is known ...
What is Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD)
What is Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD)

... • These unhappy feelings are consuming. These feelings cause harmful beliefs and attitudes that affect thoughts, emotions and behaviors. These can then harm all areas of a person’s life, such as their social activities and job. • No other mental disorder, for example eating disorders, cause these co ...
Treating Eating Disorders With the Buddhist Tradition of Mindfulness
Treating Eating Disorders With the Buddhist Tradition of Mindfulness

... When the group got together on campus the following Monday, it was sad, funny, and puzzling. None of them could remember their morning showers or even what they had studied in their classes moments earlier. Their minds were everywhere else. One look at their stomachs during the lunch sent the two gi ...
Running Head: Sybil Sybil Kayla DeMeo The College of New Jersey
Running Head: Sybil Sybil Kayla DeMeo The College of New Jersey

... that environmentally-driven alterations of cognition, perception, behavior and self-related ...
Propranolol: a Treatment for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (Ptsd) Or
Propranolol: a Treatment for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (Ptsd) Or

... event or events that involved actual or threatened death or serious injury, or a threat to the physical integrity of self or others. Additionally, the person’s response to the experience must involve intense fear, helplessness, or horror. The victim must also persistently re-experience the traumatic ...
Emotional learning during dissociative states in borderline
Emotional learning during dissociative states in borderline

... conditioning processes are inhibited by dissociation. Regarding neurobiological processes, the corticolimbic disconnection model of dissociation12 hypothesizes that the medial prefrontal cortex inhibits the amygdala, resulting in a reduced emotional experience and a dampened autonomic output. Recent ...
Stress, Anxiety, Depression And Psychological Responses Among
Stress, Anxiety, Depression And Psychological Responses Among

... Stress, anxiety, and depression are psychological responses individuals experience as a result of their coping strategies. African American women experience these psychological responses to an extent determined by their coping strategies (Ellis, 2001, Gasman, Hirschfield, Vultaggio, 2008). The relat ...
Understanding-ICD-10-CM-in-the-Era-of-the-DSM-5
Understanding-ICD-10-CM-in-the-Era-of-the-DSM-5

... Rationale: There was widespread concern among clinicians and researchers that clinical reality did not support DSM-IV’s three independent learning disorders. This is particularly important given that most children with specific learning disorder manifest deficits in more than one area. ...
Stress Response Syndrome Associated with HIV Positive Test
Stress Response Syndrome Associated with HIV Positive Test

... findings. The research documents conditions of HIV Anxiety Syndrome and issues of survivor guilt in individuals with negative HIV test findings (Moskowitz, 1989). The discovery that one has an HIV infection is an emotionally disruptive event. Due to the lethal consequences of this infection, such a ...
post traumatic stress disorders in a global context
post traumatic stress disorders in a global context

... each other. Freud particularly traced the origins of neurosis to the sexual violations of young children by their own adult kin. The commonplace experience of traumatic experiences, whether natural or manmade, makes one wonder if traumatic stress is in fact not the initial common pathway through whi ...
PowerPoint - Tennessee Psychological Association
PowerPoint - Tennessee Psychological Association

... -Difficulty in the social use of language, e.g., meet and greet, volume regulation, social norms of speaking, etc. -Absence of repetitive behaviors. ...
Conditioned fear associated phenotypes as robust, translational
Conditioned fear associated phenotypes as robust, translational

... compound; (34)]. More recent studies of fear inhibition have used compound stimuli in which one compound is reinforced (termed AX+), another is non-reinforced (termed BX−) during acquisition. Fear inhibition is then measured as the transfer of the inhibitory (safe) properties of stimulus B onto stim ...
anxiety disorders
anxiety disorders

... The student will know and understand the Psychological Disorders investigates patterns of behavior that are considered deviant or distressful in our culture and includes how psychologists diagnose these patterns. After completing their study of this chapter, students should be able to: 1)identify th ...
Psychological Disorders
Psychological Disorders

... accumulated from gambling. He also has been feeling extreme pressure about not being able to take care of his eight children. After having too much to drink, Carson ran over a child crossing the street. Immediately following this episode, Carson could not remember who he was. This ...
Stress and its impact on health
Stress and its impact on health

... term today, a complex phenomenon and is becoming more and more important in today’s world. Furthermore, modern society leads to particular kinds of stress styles, which people suffer from and which causes damage and death. Because of this damage, it is important that people gain a better understandi ...
Other Personality Disorders
Other Personality Disorders

... Special emphasis was made for Substance/Medication Induced Disorders and specific classifications for them are listed for Schizophrenia; Bipolar; Depressive, Anxiety, Obsessive Compulsive; Sleep-Wake; Sexual Dysfunctions; and Neurocognitive Disorders. ...
Is hypochondriasis an anxiety disorder?
Is hypochondriasis an anxiety disorder?

... to benign, arousal-related body sensations and often erroneously attribute them to organic causes such as heart attacks, strokes and other serious medical conditions. The second level of overlap is more interesting. When behaviour is meaningfully linked to beliefs, a certain degree of convergence ma ...
< 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 59 >

Psychological trauma

Psychological trauma is a type of damage to the psyche that occurs as a result of a severely distressing event.Trauma is often the result of an overwhelming amount of stress that exceeds one's ability to cope or integrate the emotions involved with that experience. A traumatic event involves one experience, or repeating events with the sense of being overwhelmed that can be delayed by weeks, years, or even decades as the person struggles to cope with the immediate circumstances, eventually leading to serious, long-term negative consequences, often overlooked even by mental health professionals: ""If clinicians fail to look through a trauma lens and to conceptualize client problems as related possibly to current or past trauma, they may fail to see that trauma victims, young and old, organize much of their lives around repetitive patterns of reliving and warding off traumatic memories, reminders, and affects."" Trauma can be caused by a wide variety of events, but there are a few common aspects. There is frequently a violation of the person's familiar ideas about the world and of their human rights, putting the person in a state of extreme confusion and insecurity. This is also seen when institutions that are depended upon for survival, violate or betray or disillusion the person in some unforeseen way.Psychologically traumatic experiences often involve physical trauma that threatens one's survival and sense of security. Typical causes and dangers of psychological trauma include harassment, embarrassment, sexual abuse, employment discrimination, police brutality, bullying, domestic violence, indoctrination, being the victim of an alcoholic parent, the threat of either, or the witnessing of either, particularly in childhood, life-threatening medical conditions, medication-induced trauma. Catastrophic natural disasters such as earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, war or other mass violence can also cause psychological trauma. Long-term exposure to situations such as extreme poverty or milder forms of abuse, such as verbal abuse, exist independently of physical trauma but still generate psychological trauma.However, the definition of trauma differs among individuals by their subjective experiences, not the objective facts. People will react to similar events differently. In other words, not all people who experience a potentially traumatic event will actually become psychologically traumatized. This discrepancy in risk rate can be attributed to protective factors some individuals may have that enable them to cope with trauma. Some examples are mild exposure to stress early in life, resilience characteristics, and active seeking of help.Some theories suggest childhood trauma can increase one's risk for psychological disorders including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, and substance abuse. Childhood adversity is associated with heightened neuroticism scores during adulthood. Parts of the brain in a growing child are developing in a sequential and hierarchical order, from least complex to most complex. The brains neurons are designed to change in response to the constant external signals and stimulation, receiving and storing new information. This allows the brain to continually respond to its surroundings and promote survival. Our five main sensory signals contribute to the developing brain structure and its function. Infants and children begin to create internal representations of their external environment shortly after birth. The more frequent a specific pattern of brain neurons is activated, the more permanent the internal representation associated with the pattern becomes. This causes sensitization in the brain towards the specific neural network. Because of this sensitization, the neural pattern can be activated by decreasingly less external stimuli. Childhood abuse tends to have the most complications with long-term effects out of all forms of trauma because it occurs during the most sensitive and critical stages of psychological development. It could also lead to violent behavior, possibly as extreme as serial murder. For example, Hickey's Trauma-Control Model suggests that ""childhood trauma for serial murderers may serve as a triggering mechanism resulting in an individual's inability to cope with the stress of certain events.""
  • studyres.com © 2025
  • DMCA
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Report