Eating Disorders in the Workplace
... There is world class research going on - much of it in the UK and involving collaborations with centres of excellence across the globe. The latest research is showing us that the causes are much more biologically based than was previously thought. Eating disorders are complex and not everyone will e ...
... There is world class research going on - much of it in the UK and involving collaborations with centres of excellence across the globe. The latest research is showing us that the causes are much more biologically based than was previously thought. Eating disorders are complex and not everyone will e ...
Depression and Anxiety in end stage renal disease patients
... This thesis focuses on depressive, anxiety and somatoform disorders in patients with endstage renal disease (ESRD) in dialysis treatment. To help sustain their life, dialysis patients are dependent on time-consuming treatment that usually takes several times during the week. The use of pharmaceutica ...
... This thesis focuses on depressive, anxiety and somatoform disorders in patients with endstage renal disease (ESRD) in dialysis treatment. To help sustain their life, dialysis patients are dependent on time-consuming treatment that usually takes several times during the week. The use of pharmaceutica ...
effects of childhood maltreatment a
... strongly the subject expects a response of either acceptance or rejection from others. The affective component, rejection anxiety, is assessed by a question on how anxious or concerned the subject would be regarding this response. For each of the 9 scenarios, the cognitive and affective components a ...
... strongly the subject expects a response of either acceptance or rejection from others. The affective component, rejection anxiety, is assessed by a question on how anxious or concerned the subject would be regarding this response. For each of the 9 scenarios, the cognitive and affective components a ...
Its Not You, Its Me: An Examination of Clinician and ClientLevel
... gender) and clinician-level (e.g., age, discipline, clinical experience, training) factors. Participants (N = 560) completed an anonymous online survey in which they read case information describing a client with BPD and answered questions to assess their reactions toward the client. The study used ...
... gender) and clinician-level (e.g., age, discipline, clinical experience, training) factors. Participants (N = 560) completed an anonymous online survey in which they read case information describing a client with BPD and answered questions to assess their reactions toward the client. The study used ...
A Twin Study of Generalized Anxiety Disorder
... Anxiety is a common complication of substance misuse disorders and none of the individual symptom is specific to it (Barlow & Wincze, 1998). At the very beginning, most of individuals with anxiety disorders would have been classified within the rather broadly defined category. Researchers must to ex ...
... Anxiety is a common complication of substance misuse disorders and none of the individual symptom is specific to it (Barlow & Wincze, 1998). At the very beginning, most of individuals with anxiety disorders would have been classified within the rather broadly defined category. Researchers must to ex ...
Spatial behavior reflects the mental disorder in OCD patients with
... the association and relationship between OCD and other Axis-I mental diagnoses, including schizophrenia disorder: comorbidity and spectrum. According to the comorbidity notion, there is an endophenotype that is a combination of OCD and schizophrenia (‘‘schizo-OCD’’), whereas according to the spectru ...
... the association and relationship between OCD and other Axis-I mental diagnoses, including schizophrenia disorder: comorbidity and spectrum. According to the comorbidity notion, there is an endophenotype that is a combination of OCD and schizophrenia (‘‘schizo-OCD’’), whereas according to the spectru ...
Prospective Follow-Up of Girls With Attention
... Group, 1999b; Owens et al., 2003) or a lack of explicit consideration of sex effects (Molina et al., 2009). A limitation of much extant prospective research is the limited socioeconomic or ethnic diversity of most participants. Furthermore, retention rates across childhood through adulthood have not ...
... Group, 1999b; Owens et al., 2003) or a lack of explicit consideration of sex effects (Molina et al., 2009). A limitation of much extant prospective research is the limited socioeconomic or ethnic diversity of most participants. Furthermore, retention rates across childhood through adulthood have not ...
Chapter 1 - We can offer most test bank and solution manual you
... "In order to be insane, a person must show evidence of some biological cause of the symptoms." "Insanity is a general term that refers to the presence of severe signs of mental deterioration." "Insanity is a legal term that refers to judgments about whether a person should be held responsible for cr ...
... "In order to be insane, a person must show evidence of some biological cause of the symptoms." "Insanity is a general term that refers to the presence of severe signs of mental deterioration." "Insanity is a legal term that refers to judgments about whether a person should be held responsible for cr ...
The Y-Worri Project: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
... of disorder identification [14,15] and help-seeking behaviour by adolescents [16,17]. Many young people, particularly men, do not seek help for anxiety. This was reflected in the 2007 National Survey of Mental Health and Wellbeing which found that only 13.2% of young men aged between 16 and 24 years ...
... of disorder identification [14,15] and help-seeking behaviour by adolescents [16,17]. Many young people, particularly men, do not seek help for anxiety. This was reflected in the 2007 National Survey of Mental Health and Wellbeing which found that only 13.2% of young men aged between 16 and 24 years ...
Psychiatric and physical comorbidity in adults with autism spectrum
... lower chance of recovery compared to the general population. Increased awareness and a high degree of diagnostic skill to identify those with the disorder should be promoted among physicians and psychiatrists. ...
... lower chance of recovery compared to the general population. Increased awareness and a high degree of diagnostic skill to identify those with the disorder should be promoted among physicians and psychiatrists. ...
UNDERSTANDING ABNORMALITY: DEFINITION
... traumatic event may experience unrelenting pain or emotional turmoil and may not be able to cope in daily life. Risk to Self or Other People: When an individual‘s actions pose a threat to one‘s own life or to the life of others, the behaviour is considered to be abnormal. A severely depressed indivi ...
... traumatic event may experience unrelenting pain or emotional turmoil and may not be able to cope in daily life. Risk to Self or Other People: When an individual‘s actions pose a threat to one‘s own life or to the life of others, the behaviour is considered to be abnormal. A severely depressed indivi ...
Attachment Style, Spirituality, and Depressive Symptoms Among
... insecure attachment styles. In regard to the two spirituality dimensions, it was hypothesized that higher levels of existential purpose and meaning in life would be related to lower levels of depressive symptoms. In addition, and based on previous findings in the literature, higher levels of religio ...
... insecure attachment styles. In regard to the two spirituality dimensions, it was hypothesized that higher levels of existential purpose and meaning in life would be related to lower levels of depressive symptoms. In addition, and based on previous findings in the literature, higher levels of religio ...
Incident users of antipsychotics: who are they and how do
... use has markedly increased during the last couple of decades [3], mostly due to newer on-label use (bipolar disorder) and increasing frequencies of off-label use [4, 5]. Currently, schizophrenia spectrum disorders and bipolar disorder are the main indications for treatment with antipsychotic medicat ...
... use has markedly increased during the last couple of decades [3], mostly due to newer on-label use (bipolar disorder) and increasing frequencies of off-label use [4, 5]. Currently, schizophrenia spectrum disorders and bipolar disorder are the main indications for treatment with antipsychotic medicat ...
Practice Parameter for the Assessment and Treatment of
... subsequent behavioral change directed toward weight loss 6 to 12 months before the full clinical diagnosis. The rate of weight loss typically escalates in the last few weeks before referral, prompting parents to seek a medical evaluation.36 Patients sometimes report initial drive for thinness, but o ...
... subsequent behavioral change directed toward weight loss 6 to 12 months before the full clinical diagnosis. The rate of weight loss typically escalates in the last few weeks before referral, prompting parents to seek a medical evaluation.36 Patients sometimes report initial drive for thinness, but o ...
Concurrent Disorders - Canadian Centre of Substance Abuse
... but to avoid repetition have been used here as equivalents. The definitions below are based on the DSM-IV manual and Chapter 70 “Drug Abuse and Drug Dependence.” ...
... but to avoid repetition have been used here as equivalents. The definitions below are based on the DSM-IV manual and Chapter 70 “Drug Abuse and Drug Dependence.” ...
Conversion Disorder - Europe`s Journal of Psychology
... Rational-Choice Theory of Neurosis (RCTN; Rofé, 2010), shows that a new concept of repression and an alternative model of unawareness can explain in a more parsimonious way the development of neuroses and integrate all therapies relating to these disorders into one theoretical framework. Moreover, w ...
... Rational-Choice Theory of Neurosis (RCTN; Rofé, 2010), shows that a new concept of repression and an alternative model of unawareness can explain in a more parsimonious way the development of neuroses and integrate all therapies relating to these disorders into one theoretical framework. Moreover, w ...
Help for Anxiety, Phobias, OCD and Depression.
... The key to overcoming most anxiety disorders (and depression) involves understanding how they work. Like everything in life, when we know how and why something works we know how to stop it. To try and overcome these problems without this understanding is exceptionally difficult for whatever we may t ...
... The key to overcoming most anxiety disorders (and depression) involves understanding how they work. Like everything in life, when we know how and why something works we know how to stop it. To try and overcome these problems without this understanding is exceptionally difficult for whatever we may t ...
Educator Toolkit – National Eating Disorders
... disorders. Some eating disorders combine elements of several diagnostic classifications and are known as “other specified feeding or eating disorder” (OSFED). Eating disorders often coexist with a mental illness such as depression, anxiety, or obsessive-compulsive disorder. People with an eating dis ...
... disorders. Some eating disorders combine elements of several diagnostic classifications and are known as “other specified feeding or eating disorder” (OSFED). Eating disorders often coexist with a mental illness such as depression, anxiety, or obsessive-compulsive disorder. People with an eating dis ...
the effect of habituation and changes in cognition on anxious
... future (Barlow, 2004). Although distinct, anxiety and fear often overlap to varying degrees among the different types of disorders. One way to differentiate between the various anxiety diagnoses is the stimuli that elicit the fear or anxiety in an individual, however many other differences exist. Bu ...
... future (Barlow, 2004). Although distinct, anxiety and fear often overlap to varying degrees among the different types of disorders. One way to differentiate between the various anxiety diagnoses is the stimuli that elicit the fear or anxiety in an individual, however many other differences exist. Bu ...
The ICD-10 Classification of Mental and Behavioural Disorders
... epidemiological studies of mental disorders in general population groups in different countries (5). Another major project focused on developing an assessment instrument suitable for use by clinicians (Schedules for Clinical Assessment in Neuropsychiatry) (6). Still another study was initiated to de ...
... epidemiological studies of mental disorders in general population groups in different countries (5). Another major project focused on developing an assessment instrument suitable for use by clinicians (Schedules for Clinical Assessment in Neuropsychiatry) (6). Still another study was initiated to de ...
ADHD: Fact, Fiction, or Somewhere In Between
... further claim that “Methylphenidate (Ritalin) is one of the nation’s most commonly stolen and diverted substances.” The U. S. Department of Justice has confirmed “Ritalin [to be] a Schedule II stimulant similar to amphetamines and cocaine and has the same dependency profile as cocaine and other stim ...
... further claim that “Methylphenidate (Ritalin) is one of the nation’s most commonly stolen and diverted substances.” The U. S. Department of Justice has confirmed “Ritalin [to be] a Schedule II stimulant similar to amphetamines and cocaine and has the same dependency profile as cocaine and other stim ...
cognitive vulnerability to unipolar and bipolar mood disorders
... hypomania/mania. Second, bipolar disorders have their initial onset at an early age (mean onset age of 14; Goodwin & Jamison, 1990), with childhood onsets not uncommon (Geller & DelBello, 2003). Thus, to truly establish temporal precedence for initial onset of bipolar disorder, one should assess cog ...
... hypomania/mania. Second, bipolar disorders have their initial onset at an early age (mean onset age of 14; Goodwin & Jamison, 1990), with childhood onsets not uncommon (Geller & DelBello, 2003). Thus, to truly establish temporal precedence for initial onset of bipolar disorder, one should assess cog ...
A Test of an Interactive Model of
... An interactive model of bulimic symptom development, first suggested by Vohs et al. (1999), was tested in adult women (mean age ! 45.19). The following hypothesis was examined in a longitudinal design over 2.5 years: Women high in perfectionism, low in self-esteem, and who perceive themselves as ove ...
... An interactive model of bulimic symptom development, first suggested by Vohs et al. (1999), was tested in adult women (mean age ! 45.19). The following hypothesis was examined in a longitudinal design over 2.5 years: Women high in perfectionism, low in self-esteem, and who perceive themselves as ove ...
Abnormal-Psychology-7th-Edition
... Definitions should consider political factors. Disorders should be associated with distress or disability. Deviant behaviors that are encouraged by certain religions should be included. Abnormal behaviors should have a biological basis to be considered mental disorders. Difficulty: 2 Question ID: 1. ...
... Definitions should consider political factors. Disorders should be associated with distress or disability. Deviant behaviors that are encouraged by certain religions should be included. Abnormal behaviors should have a biological basis to be considered mental disorders. Difficulty: 2 Question ID: 1. ...
Spectrum disorder
A spectrum disorder is a mental disorder that includes a range of linked conditions, sometimes also extending to include singular symptoms and traits. The different elements of a spectrum either have a similar appearance or are thought to be caused by the same underlying mechanism. In either case, a spectrum approach is taken because there appears to be ""not a unitary disorder but rather a syndrome composed of subgroups"". The spectrum may represent a range of severity, comprising relatively ""severe"" mental disorders through to relatively ""mild and nonclinical deficits"".In some cases, a spectrum approach joins together conditions that were previously considered separately. A notable example of this trend is the autism spectrum, where conditions on this spectrum may now all be referred to as autism spectrum disorders. In other cases, what was treated as a single disorder comes to be seen (or seen once again) as comprising a range of types, a notable example being the bipolar spectrum. A spectrum approach may also expand the type or the severity of issues which are included, which may lessen the gap with other diagnoses or with what is considered ""normal"". Proponents of this approach argue that it is in line with evidence of gradations in the type or severity of symptoms in the general population, and helps reduce the stigma associated with a diagnosis. Critics, however, argue that it can take attention and resources away from the most serious conditions associated with the most disability, or on the other hand could unduly medicalize problems which are simply challenges people face in life.