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Severe Medically Unexplained Neuro-Disability
Severe Medically Unexplained Neuro-Disability

PSYT-2331 (200) - South Plains College
PSYT-2331 (200) - South Plains College

Other Personality Disorders
Other Personality Disorders

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Unit 12 and 13 Abnormal Psych and Treatments

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...  2) the addition of the requirement that at least one of the Criterion A symptoms must be delusions, hallucinations, or disorganized speech. 2. DSM-IV-TR subtypes of schizophrenia were eliminated 3. Schizoaffective disorder is reconceptualized as a longitudinal rather than a cross sectional diagnos ...
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Personality Disorders

... • Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID): Disorder in which a person appears to have two or more distinct identities which may alternate in controlling them. Some psychologists feel that people with DID have constructed these alternate personalities as roles they play to act out confusing emotions. • ...
Required Textbook - the Office of Planning and Assessment
Required Textbook - the Office of Planning and Assessment

... Distress: this term accounts for negative feelings by the individual with the disorder. He or she may feel deeply troubled and affected by their illness. Dysfunction: this term involves maladaptive behavior that impairs the individual's ability to perform normal daily functions, such as getting rea ...
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Abnormal Psychology Canadian Edition

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... trait dispositions & associated them with a different NT system. ...
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weiten6_PPT14

... Comorbidity Study, as summarized by Regier and Burke (2000) and Dew, Bromet, and Switzer (2000). These studies, which collectively evaluated over 28,000 subjects, provide the best Table of Contents data to date on the prevalence of mental illness in the United States. ...
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PSY 150 Common Exam

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PowerPoint - Tennessee Psychological Association

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Unit XII Textbook PowerPoint questions and answers

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Chapter 16 Test Review - DeForest Area School District

... • One essay is on schizophrenia (the symptoms, the causes, the treatments) • The second is a review of research methods (Unit II) and the influence of media on aggression (Unit XIV). ...
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Personality Disorder

... the dumps or sad about a particular issue or situation. • It is a medical condition that requires diagnosis and treatment ...
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Detailed notes to help with LOQ`s

... Disorders (DSM) published by the American Psychiatric Association as the primary reference for making diagnostic judgments. • Discuss the major diagnostic categories, including anxiety and somatoform disorders, mood disorders, schizophrenia, organic disturbance, personality disorders, and dissociati ...
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What is an eating disorder?

... • Consumes large amounts of food in short period of time • Purging (eliminates food) through use of laxatives, induced vomiting, diuretics or intense exercise • Fear of being caught. • Symptoms-loss of hair, raspy voice, bruised fingers, sores in corners of mouth, depression ...
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Abnormal Psychology

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Introduction To DSM-5- Part II

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Psychiatric Classification

... Clinically significant distress Not restricted to appearance Not of delusional intensity ...
Self-Injurious Behavior - Association for Academic Psychiatry
Self-Injurious Behavior - Association for Academic Psychiatry

Huffman PowerPoint Slides - HomePage Server for UT Psychology
Huffman PowerPoint Slides - HomePage Server for UT Psychology

... – Insecure attachment category may be related to later childhood disorders • “anxious-resistant” category - internalizing disorders • “avoidant”category - externalizing disorders ...
< 1 ... 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 ... 80 >

DSM-5

The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5) is the 2013 update to the American Psychiatric Association's (APA) classification and diagnostic tool. In the United States the DSM serves as a universal authority for psychiatric diagnosis. Treatment recommendations, as well as payment by health care providers, are often determined by DSM classifications, so the appearance of a new version has significant practical importance.The DSM-5 was published on May 18, 2013, superseding the DSM-IV-TR, which was published in 2000. The development of the new edition began with a conference in 1999, and proceeded with the formation of a Task Force in 2007, which developed and field-tested a variety of new classifications. In most respects DSM-5 is not greatly changed from DSM-IV-TR. Notable changes include dropping Asperger syndrome as a distinct classification; loss of subtype classifications for variant forms of schizophrenia; dropping the ""bereavement exclusion"" for depressive disorders; a revised treatment and naming of gender identity disorder to gender dysphoria, and removing the A2 criterion for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) because its requirement for specific emotional reactions to trauma did not apply to combat veterans and first responders with PTSD.The fifth edition was criticized by various authorities both before and after it was formally published. Critics assert, for example, that many DSM-5 revisions or additions lack empirical support; inter-rater reliability is low for many disorders; several sections contain poorly written, confusing, or contradictory information; and the psychiatric drug industry unduly influenced the manual's content. Various scientists have argued that the DSM-5 forces clinicians to make distinctions that are not supported by solid evidence, distinctions that have major treatment implications, including drug prescriptions and the availability of health insurance coverage. General criticism of the DSM-5 ultimately resulted in a petition signed by 13,000, and sponsored by many mental health organizations, which called for outside review of the document.
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