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Sometimes more competent, but always less warm
Sometimes more competent, but always less warm

... vignette for their assigned disorder. Then, in a counterbalanced order, they viewed the descriptions of the two mental-health clinicians. After each clinician description, they completed the warmth and competence ratings, as well as the favorability or effectiveness rating, for that clinician. We co ...
Evidence-based pharmacotherapy of panic
Evidence-based pharmacotherapy of panic

... symptoms. Misdiagnosis by the general practitioner (Rees et al. 1998) or by the cardiologist at the emergency unit is common (Harvison et al. 2004 ; Kuijpers et al. 2000). Thus, even those who seek help often go unrecognized. ...
Eating Disorders in the School Context: What
Eating Disorders in the School Context: What

... Parents cause eating disorders by being too controlling over their child. F To effectively help a youth with an eating disorder, the youth must first have intensive individual psychotherapy. F Eating disorder treatment for youth best happens at a slow and gentle pace. F Teaching youth about eating d ...
Mental Illness in the Legal Profession
Mental Illness in the Legal Profession

... Bipolar disorder is a form of depression. The National Institute of Mental Health defines bipolar disorder as: [A] brain disorder that causes unusual shifts in mood, energy, activity levels, and the ability to carry out day-to-day tasks. Symptoms of bipolar disorder are severe. They are different fr ...
Oppositional Defiant Disorder: A Guide for Families
Oppositional Defiant Disorder: A Guide for Families

... perform less well in school than those who have ODD alone. These children also tend to have more disruption in their families and with their relationships with authority figures than children who do not have ODD.12 Doctors have found that ODD can be a precursor to CD. CD is a more serious behavioral ...
黃宗顯醫生
黃宗顯醫生

... • Comorbidity is defined as two different diagnoses present in an individual patient 複病症性是指兩種不同診斷的病症出現於同一個病人 • It is important to recognize comorbid disorders 了解複病症的問題很重要 • Comorbidities may require treatment independent from and different to therapy for ADHD 複病症性可能需要獨立和有別於ADHD診療的治療 ...
Kalra G, Teaching diagnostic approach to a patient through cinema
Kalra G, Teaching diagnostic approach to a patient through cinema

... 3.4. Schizophrenia This diagnosis comes to mind because of an overlap between the two conditions [6] as the patient seems to manifest some psychotic features such as hallucinations; however, when one looks closely at the criteria for schizophrenia in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental D ...
Anxiety: An unpleasant emotional state characterized
Anxiety: An unpleasant emotional state characterized

... An individual is afraid to leave her house and travel to work because of a fear of experiencing a panic attack on the subway or at the office. Likely disorder: agoraphobia (anxiety disorder) Characteristics of agoraphobia • Anxiety produces by the extreme and irrational fear of experiencing a panic ...
Psychological Disorders
Psychological Disorders

... disorder.” LO 15.1.B Describe four dangers associated with using the DSM for diagnosis of mental disorders, and give an example of each. LO 15.1.C Explain the theoretical basis of projective tests, and identify the problems associated with these techniques. ...
An Economic and Policy Analysis of the Market for Methylphenidate
An Economic and Policy Analysis of the Market for Methylphenidate

... population and determine if there are any independent sociodemographic predictors of the disorder. A national profile is our first “value added” contribution to the knowledge base of ADHD and psychostimulants. ...
Personality Disorders
Personality Disorders

... lower than in most Western cultures. The factors responsible for this difference are not currently understood, but one possibility is that cultures that help maintain strong bonds to families and schools have a reduced rate of conduct disorder—a forerunner of antisocial personality disorder—among ad ...
Risk Impact of having a first-degree relative with affective disorder: a
Risk Impact of having a first-degree relative with affective disorder: a

... potent risk factor for affective disorder is a family history of affective disorder (9) and this has been confirmed in several studies (10,11). Affective disorders run in families and have a significant negative impact on the health and longevity both of those with the disorder and their family (12) ...
Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD)
Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD)

... The symptoms are usually seen in multiple settings, but may be more noticeable at home or at school. One to sixteen percent of all school-age children and adolescents have ODD. The causes of ODD are unknown, but many parents report that their child with ODD was more rigid and demanding that the chil ...
Research into EMDR Efficacy
Research into EMDR Efficacy

... one of the three recommended first-line treatments for trauma [4]. In the UK, EMDR is one of the two recommended treatments for PTSD in the guidelines of the National Institute of Clinical Excellence (NICE) [5]. Other disorders Research into EMDR with other disorders is at an earlier stage of develo ...
Axis-I comorbidity is linked to prospective Open Access
Axis-I comorbidity is linked to prospective Open Access

... reflected by changes in BMI. However this hypothesis has to be verified in further studies. Anxiety disorders are very common in ED patients (e.g., [20]), but the role of anxiety disorders on the diagnostic instability is still unclear. In the present study we could not find associations between dia ...
Anxiety Disorders Kit - Northern NSW Local Health District
Anxiety Disorders Kit - Northern NSW Local Health District

... may cope either by trying to do everything perfectly, limiting the amount you do (like writing, eating, speaking) in front of others or you may withdraw gradually from contact with others. Social Phobia, also know as Social Anxiety Disorder, is the third most common psychiatric disorder after depres ...
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder

... In this report, we provide an evidence-based overview of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), including diagnosis, prevalence, developmental expression of symptoms, persistence, the heterogeneity of functional outcome, impairment in afflicted adults, psychiatric comorbidity, pathophysiol ...
Affective (mood) disorders
Affective (mood) disorders

... Figures for the lifetime incidence or lifetime risk of depressive disorders depend on the criteria used to define ‘depressive disorders’. Using the criteria for major depressive disorder (DSM-IV), the lifetime risk of depressive disorders is about 15%. The prevalence of depressive disorders at any o ...
Anxiety and Depressive Disorders in Adult Children Caring for
Anxiety and Depressive Disorders in Adult Children Caring for

... Children who care for parents are engaging in a role reversal that in itself has been discussed as a major developmental transition (Robinson & Thurnher, 1979). The progression o f care responsibility also typically follows a different pattern in adult children. Adult children are often assisting th ...
What School Psychologists Need to Know about DSM‐5 Workshop
What School Psychologists Need to Know about DSM‐5 Workshop

... “With DSM‐5, pa?ents worried about having a medical  illness will oNen be diagnosed with soma?c symptom  disorder, normal grief will be misiden?fied as major  depressive disorder, the forgeQulness of old age will be  confused with mild neurocogni?ve disorder, temper  tantrums will be labeled disrup?v ...
UNDERSTANDING GENERALIZED ANXIETY DISORDER
UNDERSTANDING GENERALIZED ANXIETY DISORDER

... compulsive disorder panic disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, social phobia, specific phobias, and substance use disorders. Generalized anxiety disorder typically has a gradual onset and it usually begins when someone is her/his late 20s or early 30s but as mentioned earlier children and the ...
Deja Review Behavioral Science, Second Edition
Deja Review Behavioral Science, Second Edition

... Medicine is an ever-changing science. As new research and clinical experience broaden our knowledge, changes in treatment and drug therapy are required. The authors and the publisher of this work have checked with sources believed to be reliable in their efforts to provide information that is comple ...
5lies we believe about anxiety
5lies we believe about anxiety

... disorders more often than men because it is more socially acceptable for women to seek treatment. Even evolutionarily, if you’re a scared woman, that’s socially acceptable. If you are a scared man, you are going to get killed by a saber-tooth tiger – or your tribe, if you are lucky enough to escape ...
Chapter: 10 Depressive and Bipolar Disorders.
Chapter: 10 Depressive and Bipolar Disorders.

... d. Rates of bipolar disorder are higher in clinical samples. ANSWER: b DIFFICULTY: Easy REFERENCES: Bipolar Disorder KEYWORDS: Bloom’s: Understand 52. Regarding bipolar disorder, boys display ____. a. more depressed mood than girls b. later onset than girls c. more severity than girls d. more manic ...
7 Chapter II: Literature Review 2.1 Introduction The COD
7 Chapter II: Literature Review 2.1 Introduction The COD

... Individual variability may account for evidence that individuals who have a predisposition to psychiatric disorders are more likely to develop these disorders when exposed to certain substances, than those without this predisposition. Research has shown that adolescents with a predisposition for psy ...
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Conduct disorder

Conduct disorder (CD) is a psychological disorder diagnosed in childhood or adolescence that presents itself through a repetitive and persistent pattern of behavior in which the basic rights of others or major age-appropriate norms are violated. These behaviors are often referred to as ""antisocial behaviors."" It is often seen as the precursor to antisocial personality disorder, which is not diagnosed until the individual is 18 years old.Conduct disorder is estimated to affect 51.1 million people globally as of 2013.
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