![Education and Science Vol 39 (2014) No 176 369](http://s1.studyres.com/store/data/003541867_1-cc62573d8697b72c3562d785f5009880-300x300.png)
Comorbid mental disorders and substance use disorders
... New South Wales. She has conducted research into the treatment of schizophrenia and schizophrenia comorbid with substance use disorders. Her recent work includes the treatment of amphetamine dependence. Elizabeth Brewin is a research nurse at the Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College, London. In th ...
... New South Wales. She has conducted research into the treatment of schizophrenia and schizophrenia comorbid with substance use disorders. Her recent work includes the treatment of amphetamine dependence. Elizabeth Brewin is a research nurse at the Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College, London. In th ...
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy
... research has been published regarding CBT, including a number of well-designed studies involving people in “real world” clinical settings. Yet despite this large base of evidence, information about CBT has not been well communicated to consumers, families, and providers of health care. Consequently, ...
... research has been published regarding CBT, including a number of well-designed studies involving people in “real world” clinical settings. Yet despite this large base of evidence, information about CBT has not been well communicated to consumers, families, and providers of health care. Consequently, ...
PDF
... helping thousands of people suffering from this disease live productive lives. Breakthrough schizophrenia medicines enable most patients to be treated in the community rather than institutional settings, and medicines for Alzheimer’s disease are helping elderly people maintain their independence lon ...
... helping thousands of people suffering from this disease live productive lives. Breakthrough schizophrenia medicines enable most patients to be treated in the community rather than institutional settings, and medicines for Alzheimer’s disease are helping elderly people maintain their independence lon ...
Music Therapy Treatment of Depressive Symptoms in Adolescents
... For the purposes of this study, depressive symptoms included hopelessness, lack of energy, low self-esteem, inability to experience pleasure, excessive sadness not due to bereavement, consistent feelings of emptiness, and excessive irritability when combined with other symptoms. Patients did not nee ...
... For the purposes of this study, depressive symptoms included hopelessness, lack of energy, low self-esteem, inability to experience pleasure, excessive sadness not due to bereavement, consistent feelings of emptiness, and excessive irritability when combined with other symptoms. Patients did not nee ...
A Study Of Childhood Anxiety Disorders And Their Impact On The
... Burke, Maribeth, "A Study Of Childhood Anxiety Disorders And Their Impact On The Development Of Anxiety Disorders In ...
... Burke, Maribeth, "A Study Of Childhood Anxiety Disorders And Their Impact On The Development Of Anxiety Disorders In ...
Traumatic Brain Injury Medical Treatment Guidelines Revised: November 26, 2012
... Effective: March 15, 1998 ...
... Effective: March 15, 1998 ...
IOSR Journal of Nursing and Health Science (IOSR-JNHS)
... borderline personality disorder conferred additional risk for suicidal ideation and self harm compared to major depressive disorder among adolescents. 9,10 It is the only personality disorder which has suicidal or self injurious behavior among its diagnostic criteria and current studies suggests tha ...
... borderline personality disorder conferred additional risk for suicidal ideation and self harm compared to major depressive disorder among adolescents. 9,10 It is the only personality disorder which has suicidal or self injurious behavior among its diagnostic criteria and current studies suggests tha ...
IOSR Journal Of Humanities And Social Science (IOSR-JHSS)
... the mental illness and its treatment, these socio-cultural factors can lay foundation within a person to form believes to explain their illness will be probably valid(Kleinman., 1980). The multiple dimensions of insight is variously affected by disease/socio-cultural factors(Gigante & Castel, 2004). ...
... the mental illness and its treatment, these socio-cultural factors can lay foundation within a person to form believes to explain their illness will be probably valid(Kleinman., 1980). The multiple dimensions of insight is variously affected by disease/socio-cultural factors(Gigante & Castel, 2004). ...
HALL A
... Recent clinical and genetic research findings in perinatal psychiatry, Ian Jones (UK) How to build efficient and sustainable community networks for new families, Jane Honikman (USA) Delivery related post traumatic stress disorder, Onder Kavakci (Turkey) Interpersonal psychotherapy in perinatal perio ...
... Recent clinical and genetic research findings in perinatal psychiatry, Ian Jones (UK) How to build efficient and sustainable community networks for new families, Jane Honikman (USA) Delivery related post traumatic stress disorder, Onder Kavakci (Turkey) Interpersonal psychotherapy in perinatal perio ...
Identification of anxiety and other psychiatric disorders in
... autism or ID, it is likely that more appropriate treatment will be provided. One problem related to identifying psychiatric disorders in individuals with autism is the considerable conceptual overlap between autism and psychiatric disorders. There is considerably symptom overlap and similar behaviou ...
... autism or ID, it is likely that more appropriate treatment will be provided. One problem related to identifying psychiatric disorders in individuals with autism is the considerable conceptual overlap between autism and psychiatric disorders. There is considerably symptom overlap and similar behaviou ...
Clinical and Educational Child Psychology
... Some factors that can influence a child’s rate of skill acquisition, for better or worse, include: child variables, such as heredity, temperament, cognitive ability, motor, affective, and social maturation; and environmental variables, such as parenting practices, socio-economic status, peers, qualit ...
... Some factors that can influence a child’s rate of skill acquisition, for better or worse, include: child variables, such as heredity, temperament, cognitive ability, motor, affective, and social maturation; and environmental variables, such as parenting practices, socio-economic status, peers, qualit ...
You Can Help Prevent or Reduce Anxiety in Students! What is
... The Anxiety Disorders Association of America website offers comprehensive information and statistics pertaining to anxiety disorder. The ADAA’s website provides information pertaining to upcoming conferences, resources, and treatments as well. The above link will route the individual to statistical ...
... The Anxiety Disorders Association of America website offers comprehensive information and statistics pertaining to anxiety disorder. The ADAA’s website provides information pertaining to upcoming conferences, resources, and treatments as well. The above link will route the individual to statistical ...
Guidelines for the Assessment and Management of Patients with
... The growth and development of sleep medicine in Ireland has been a gradual process over the years. The first clinical sleep laboratory was established in St. Vincent’s Hospital, Dublin, in 1985, and over the intervening years several other laboratories have been established throughout the country. ...
... The growth and development of sleep medicine in Ireland has been a gradual process over the years. The first clinical sleep laboratory was established in St. Vincent’s Hospital, Dublin, in 1985, and over the intervening years several other laboratories have been established throughout the country. ...
Medical Necessity Criteria Guidelines
... individual patient’s biopsychosocial needs. We see the continuum of care as a fluid treatment pathway, where patients may enter treatment at any level and be moved to more or less-intensive settings or levels of care as their changing clinical needs dictate. At any level of care, such treatment is i ...
... individual patient’s biopsychosocial needs. We see the continuum of care as a fluid treatment pathway, where patients may enter treatment at any level and be moved to more or less-intensive settings or levels of care as their changing clinical needs dictate. At any level of care, such treatment is i ...
Concussion Management and Diagnosis Best Practices
... timeline for return to full activity (including return-to-play and return-to-learn) is often difficult to project. The psychological response to injury is also unpredictable. Sometimes, studentathletes who are kept out of their sport for a prolonged period of time experience emotional distress relat ...
... timeline for return to full activity (including return-to-play and return-to-learn) is often difficult to project. The psychological response to injury is also unpredictable. Sometimes, studentathletes who are kept out of their sport for a prolonged period of time experience emotional distress relat ...
Psychogenic nonepileptic seizures
... emotionally charged screams, bilateral motor activity with retained consciousness and ictal speech arrest with unimpaired postictal recollection of the event [44].A degree of ictal responsiveness may be preserved in focal frontal or temporal lobe seizures which may later not be remembered [45]. Semi ...
... emotionally charged screams, bilateral motor activity with retained consciousness and ictal speech arrest with unimpaired postictal recollection of the event [44].A degree of ictal responsiveness may be preserved in focal frontal or temporal lobe seizures which may later not be remembered [45]. Semi ...
Alea Iacta Est« (A Case Series Report of Problem and Pathological
... be aware of the effects of gambling4. Studies carried out in some countries showed that increased access to gambling raised the number of problem gamblers. Although this relation may not be proportional, it certainly is a healthcare concern, and the rapid expansion of gambling becomes a significant ...
... be aware of the effects of gambling4. Studies carried out in some countries showed that increased access to gambling raised the number of problem gamblers. Although this relation may not be proportional, it certainly is a healthcare concern, and the rapid expansion of gambling becomes a significant ...
magistrska naloga enoviti magistrski študij farmacija
... 3121 elderly community dwelling persons, participants of ESTHER cohort study aged between 57 and 84 that ticked at least six items of the PHQ-8 questionnaire during home visit were included in analysis. A PHQ-8 score was the main criterion to differentiate between participants showing current clinic ...
... 3121 elderly community dwelling persons, participants of ESTHER cohort study aged between 57 and 84 that ticked at least six items of the PHQ-8 questionnaire during home visit were included in analysis. A PHQ-8 score was the main criterion to differentiate between participants showing current clinic ...
SCHIZOPHRENIA AND RELATED PSYCHOSES FACULTAD DE PSICOLOGÍA
... (disorganized speech and behaviour, formal thought disorder, inappropriate affect – the disorganized dimension) (American Psychiatric Association (APA), 2000). Moreover, alterations in neurocognition (e.g. difficulties in memory, attention, and executive functioning—the cognitive-symptom dimension) ...
... (disorganized speech and behaviour, formal thought disorder, inappropriate affect – the disorganized dimension) (American Psychiatric Association (APA), 2000). Moreover, alterations in neurocognition (e.g. difficulties in memory, attention, and executive functioning—the cognitive-symptom dimension) ...
Evidence Base of Family Therapy and Systemic Practice
... relationship difficulties while living their lives in a variety of family structures and relationships. They also occupy the full life span and the great range of ethnic and other cultural variation that communities now contain. This review starts with an account of the basis of systemic therapy and ...
... relationship difficulties while living their lives in a variety of family structures and relationships. They also occupy the full life span and the great range of ethnic and other cultural variation that communities now contain. This review starts with an account of the basis of systemic therapy and ...
Dissociative identity disorder
![](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Dissociative_identity_disorder.jpg?width=300)
Dissociative identity disorder (DID), previously known as multiple personality disorder (MPD), is a mental disorder on the dissociative spectrum characterized by the appearance of at least two distinct and relatively enduring identities or dissociated personality states that alternately control a person's behavior, accompanied by memory impairment for important information not explained by ordinary forgetfulness. These symptoms are not accounted for by substance abuse, seizures, other medical conditions, nor by imaginative play in children. Diagnosis is often difficult as there is considerable comorbidity with other mental disorders. Malingering should be considered if there is possible financial or forensic gain, as well as factitious disorder if help-seeking behavior is prominent.DID is one of the most controversial psychiatric disorders, with no clear consensus on diagnostic criteria or treatment. Research on treatment efficacy has been concerned primarily with clinical approaches and case studies. Dissociative symptoms range from common lapses in attention, becoming distracted by something else, and daydreaming, to pathological dissociative disorders. No systematic, empirically-supported definition of ""dissociation"" exists. It is not the same as schizophrenia.Although neither epidemiological surveys nor longitudinal studies have been conducted, it is generally believed that DID rarely resolves spontaneously. Symptoms are said to vary over time. In general, the prognosis is poor, especially for those with comorbid disorders. There are few systematic data on the prevalence of DID. The International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation states that the prevalence is between 1 and 3% in the general population, and between 1 and 5% in inpatient groups in Europe and North America. DID is diagnosed more frequently in North America than in the rest of the world, and is diagnosed three to nine times more often in females than in males. The prevalence of DID diagnoses increased greatly in the latter half of the 20th century, along with the number of identities (often referred to as ""alters"") claimed by patients (increasing from an average of two or three to approximately 16). DID is also controversial within the legal system, where it has been used as a rarely successful form of the insanity defense. The 1990s showed a parallel increase in the number of court cases involving the diagnosis.Dissociative disorders including DID have been attributed to disruptions in memory caused by trauma and other forms of stress, but research on this hypothesis has been characterized by poor methodology. So far, scientific studies, usually focusing on memory, have been few and the results have been inconclusive. An alternative hypothesis for the etiology of DID is as a by-product of techniques employed by some therapists, especially those using hypnosis, and disagreement between the two positions is characterized by intense debate. DID became a popular diagnosis in the 1970s, 80s and 90s, but it is unclear if the actual rate of the disorder increased, if it was more recognized by health care providers, or if sociocultural factors caused an increase in therapy-induced (iatrogenic) presentations. The unusual number of diagnoses after 1980, clustered around a small number of clinicians and the suggestibility characteristic of those with DID, support the hypothesis that DID is therapist-induced. The unusual clustering of diagnoses has also been explained as due to a lack of awareness and training among clinicians to recognize cases of DID.