An examination of generalized anxiety disorder and dysthymic
... only a limited number of characteristics could be examined in the Triple study, consisting of gender, age and variables derived from the CIDI diagnostic interview [12-month diagnosis of GAD and/or DD and/or major depressive disorder (MDD), co-morbid 12-month anxiety disorders, number of depressive, ...
... only a limited number of characteristics could be examined in the Triple study, consisting of gender, age and variables derived from the CIDI diagnostic interview [12-month diagnosis of GAD and/or DD and/or major depressive disorder (MDD), co-morbid 12-month anxiety disorders, number of depressive, ...
SERIES ‘‘COMPREHENSIVE MANAGEMENT OF END-STAGE COPD’’ Number 3 in this Series
... anxiety with COPD include factors related to smoking and dyspnoea. Tobacco smoking is widely acknowledged as the single most important environmental risk factor for the development of COPD [1], and high levels of anxiety have been identified as a risk factor for adolescents starting to smoke [32]. I ...
... anxiety with COPD include factors related to smoking and dyspnoea. Tobacco smoking is widely acknowledged as the single most important environmental risk factor for the development of COPD [1], and high levels of anxiety have been identified as a risk factor for adolescents starting to smoke [32]. I ...
Running Head: DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS IN ASIAN AMERICANS
... symptoms and complaints would take people suffering from depression to their primary care doctor and they may be less likely to be diagnosed with a mental disorder. According to the DSM-IV (APA, 1994), the presence of sadness, or a lack of interest, is necessary for a major depressive episode diagno ...
... symptoms and complaints would take people suffering from depression to their primary care doctor and they may be less likely to be diagnosed with a mental disorder. According to the DSM-IV (APA, 1994), the presence of sadness, or a lack of interest, is necessary for a major depressive episode diagno ...
C F S Assessment and Treatment
... designated tender points. Forty-one percent had Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS), a disorder defined as a chronic condition with symptoms that recur reproducibly in response to low levels of exposure to multiple unrelated chemicals. The symptoms improve or resolve when the incitants are removed. ...
... designated tender points. Forty-one percent had Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS), a disorder defined as a chronic condition with symptoms that recur reproducibly in response to low levels of exposure to multiple unrelated chemicals. The symptoms improve or resolve when the incitants are removed. ...
Clinical Features of Functional Dyspepsia
... typical symptom pattern. Presence of typical reflux symptom requires management as a patient of GERD. However if patient’s symptoms do not respond overlap with functional dyspepsia may be considered.7 In a systematic review evaluating 11366 patients the overall pooled diagnostic odds ratio (DOR) of ...
... typical symptom pattern. Presence of typical reflux symptom requires management as a patient of GERD. However if patient’s symptoms do not respond overlap with functional dyspepsia may be considered.7 In a systematic review evaluating 11366 patients the overall pooled diagnostic odds ratio (DOR) of ...
Chapter 16: Psychological Disorders
... Axis I is used to classify current symptoms into explicitly defined categories. These categories range from disorders that are usually first eviReading Check dent in infancy, childhood, or adolescence (such as conduct disorders) to How does the DSM-IV substance-use disorders (such as alcoholism) to ...
... Axis I is used to classify current symptoms into explicitly defined categories. These categories range from disorders that are usually first eviReading Check dent in infancy, childhood, or adolescence (such as conduct disorders) to How does the DSM-IV substance-use disorders (such as alcoholism) to ...
Sleep-Wake Disorders
... Note: Acute and short-term insomnia (i.e., symptoms lasting less than 3 months but otherwise meeting all criteria with regard to frequency, intensity, distress, and/or impairment) should be coded as an other specified insomnia disorder. ...
... Note: Acute and short-term insomnia (i.e., symptoms lasting less than 3 months but otherwise meeting all criteria with regard to frequency, intensity, distress, and/or impairment) should be coded as an other specified insomnia disorder. ...
Psychological Disorders - Miami East Local Schools
... Axis I is used to classify current symptoms into explicitly defined categories. These categories range from disorders that are usually first eviReading Check dent in infancy, childhood, or adolescence (such as conduct disorders) to How does the DSM-IV substance-use disorders (such as alcoholism) to ...
... Axis I is used to classify current symptoms into explicitly defined categories. These categories range from disorders that are usually first eviReading Check dent in infancy, childhood, or adolescence (such as conduct disorders) to How does the DSM-IV substance-use disorders (such as alcoholism) to ...
Chapter 16: Psychological Disorders
... Axis I is used to classify current symptoms into explicitly defined categories. These categories range from disorders that are usually first eviReading Check dent in infancy, childhood, or adolescence (such as conduct disorders) to How does the DSM-IV substance-use disorders (such as alcoholism) to ...
... Axis I is used to classify current symptoms into explicitly defined categories. These categories range from disorders that are usually first eviReading Check dent in infancy, childhood, or adolescence (such as conduct disorders) to How does the DSM-IV substance-use disorders (such as alcoholism) to ...
Recovery from Eating Disorders is Possible
... Equally challenging signs involve distinctive behaviors with food like making odd combinations with food, putting condiments of foods for which condiments wouldn’t usually be used, cutting food into very small pieces, trying to focus on what others are eating, chewing food and spitting into a napkin ...
... Equally challenging signs involve distinctive behaviors with food like making odd combinations with food, putting condiments of foods for which condiments wouldn’t usually be used, cutting food into very small pieces, trying to focus on what others are eating, chewing food and spitting into a napkin ...
File
... 5. Describe some psychological factors that may be early warning signs of schizophrenia in children. Summary One the symptoms of this disease are disorganized thinking. Thoughts spill out in no logical order. People with this condition have delusions and jump from one idea to another. Another sympt ...
... 5. Describe some psychological factors that may be early warning signs of schizophrenia in children. Summary One the symptoms of this disease are disorganized thinking. Thoughts spill out in no logical order. People with this condition have delusions and jump from one idea to another. Another sympt ...
anxiety and stress disorders: course over the lifetime
... less educated parents (21,32). The onset of SAD is usually early and associated with a major stressor (4). Of nine children with SAD followed by Cantwell and Baker (23), only one was still diagnosable 4 to 5 years later; this was the highest rate of recovery of any of the disorders that they followe ...
... less educated parents (21,32). The onset of SAD is usually early and associated with a major stressor (4). Of nine children with SAD followed by Cantwell and Baker (23), only one was still diagnosable 4 to 5 years later; this was the highest rate of recovery of any of the disorders that they followe ...
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 ...
... 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 ...
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 ...
... 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 ...
Co-occurring Disorders Treatment Workbook
... The University of South Florida’s (USF) Louis de la Parte Florida Mental Health Institute is the state’s primary university research and training center for public mental health services. Nationally recognized for its innovative research and training, the de la Parte Institute is an integral part of ...
... The University of South Florida’s (USF) Louis de la Parte Florida Mental Health Institute is the state’s primary university research and training center for public mental health services. Nationally recognized for its innovative research and training, the de la Parte Institute is an integral part of ...
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 ...
... 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 ...
Association of Panic Disorder and Panic Attacks with
... by hyperventilation led to multiple, often unhelpful, investigations. Others (11, 12) have described episodic hypertension related to panic attacks in patients with hypertension. Hyperventilation has a significant pressor effect, causing an increase in blood pressure of about 9 mm Hg in normotensive ...
... by hyperventilation led to multiple, often unhelpful, investigations. Others (11, 12) have described episodic hypertension related to panic attacks in patients with hypertension. Hyperventilation has a significant pressor effect, causing an increase in blood pressure of about 9 mm Hg in normotensive ...
m102 nhg guideline on medically unexplained symptoms
... does not mean the GP must perform all delegated to the doctor's assistant, practice support staff or practice nurse, as long as they are provided with support in the form of clear working agreements, defining the conditions under which the GP must be consulted, and as long as the GP retains quality ...
... does not mean the GP must perform all delegated to the doctor's assistant, practice support staff or practice nurse, as long as they are provided with support in the form of clear working agreements, defining the conditions under which the GP must be consulted, and as long as the GP retains quality ...
Assessment and Treatment of Attention
... ant disorder (45%-50%), anxiety disorders (20%-30%), learning disorders (20%-60%), mood disorders, tic disorders, autism, substance abuse problems, and conduct disorder.24 At times, upon further evaluation, a clinician may determine that either ADHD or the comorbid condition is primary. In these cas ...
... ant disorder (45%-50%), anxiety disorders (20%-30%), learning disorders (20%-60%), mood disorders, tic disorders, autism, substance abuse problems, and conduct disorder.24 At times, upon further evaluation, a clinician may determine that either ADHD or the comorbid condition is primary. In these cas ...
Specificity of autonomic arousal to DSM
... assigned (‘‘clinical’’ diagnoses). Current clinical diagnoses not deemed to be the principal diagnosis are referred to as ‘‘additional’’ diagnoses. The sample rates of current clinical disorders (collapsing across principal and additional diagnoses) that were the focus of the present study are as fo ...
... assigned (‘‘clinical’’ diagnoses). Current clinical diagnoses not deemed to be the principal diagnosis are referred to as ‘‘additional’’ diagnoses. The sample rates of current clinical disorders (collapsing across principal and additional diagnoses) that were the focus of the present study are as fo ...
Guideline on the treatment of premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD)
... The ACOG (American College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists) recommended criteria defining moderate to severe PMS (see Definitions Table 2). The criteria include the presence of at least one psychological or physical symptom that causes significant impairment (experienced by women during the 5 da ...
... The ACOG (American College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists) recommended criteria defining moderate to severe PMS (see Definitions Table 2). The criteria include the presence of at least one psychological or physical symptom that causes significant impairment (experienced by women during the 5 da ...
Psychogenic Movement Disorders
... disorder (95%). Personality disorder (antisocial, borderline, dependent, avoidant or a mixture of those) was diagnosed in 42% of patients tested (Feinstein et al., 2001). Among the a series of 127 patients with psychogenic tremor, depression (51%) and anxiety (31%) were the most common psychiatric c ...
... disorder (95%). Personality disorder (antisocial, borderline, dependent, avoidant or a mixture of those) was diagnosed in 42% of patients tested (Feinstein et al., 2001). Among the a series of 127 patients with psychogenic tremor, depression (51%) and anxiety (31%) were the most common psychiatric c ...
Exposure to Internal and External Stimuli: Reactions in Children of
... often a diagnosis of an internalizing anxiety disorder than both other groups of children. Children of phobic parents had significantly more often an extemalizing anxiety disorder than children of normal controls. Measures and Experimental Tasks Children completed the trait form (STAIC-T) of the Sta ...
... often a diagnosis of an internalizing anxiety disorder than both other groups of children. Children of phobic parents had significantly more often an extemalizing anxiety disorder than children of normal controls. Measures and Experimental Tasks Children completed the trait form (STAIC-T) of the Sta ...
Exposure to Internal and External Stimuli: Reactions in Children of
... often a diagnosis of an internalizing anxiety disorder than both other groups of children. Children of phobic parents had significantly more often an extemalizing anxiety disorder than children of normal controls. Measures and Experimental Tasks Children completed the trait form (STAIC-T) of the Sta ...
... often a diagnosis of an internalizing anxiety disorder than both other groups of children. Children of phobic parents had significantly more often an extemalizing anxiety disorder than children of normal controls. Measures and Experimental Tasks Children completed the trait form (STAIC-T) of the Sta ...