YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Adolescents and Substance Abuse
Essays 361 - 390
that depression may be a risk factor. Depression causes many different feelings and conditions such as the inability to concentrat...
In eighteen pages Obsessive Compulsive Disorder is examined in an overview of the diagnosis as described in DSM IV with a literatu...
In our parents time it may have been: the brains, the geeks and the jocks. In a 1999 report entitled, "Girls, media, and the nego...
in the home and/or in the community. An understanding of this condition will help the educator to help the child. Research has fou...
In nine pages this paper presents a conceptual analysis of adolescent coping behavior with regard to emotional and physical suffer...
In an essay consisting of five pages what is observed when attending a child study team meeting for an autistic adolescent that ha...
In six pages this paper considers curriculum structuring regarding well rounded mental and physical health education to adolescent...
and those who have been diagnosed as having a major depressive episode (Editors, 2006). As the data verify, girls are far more lik...
2006). Marcotte and colleagues (2002) note that a great deal of progress has been made in this field over the last two decades but...
has existed for more than a decade (Associated Content, Inc., 2006; Young and Gainsborough, 2000). In fact, the juvenile system ha...
for constant friendship and status both in the group and in the school. The group gives each member protection from being alone an...
modeling and imitation (Somers and Tynan, 2006). Hypothesis in each study Collins, et al, propose that television holds the pote...
exert an influence in adult life. Freud maintained that individuals develop their personalities as a result of biological...
having lasting significance, since it impacts not only on childs subsequent emotional and psychological development but also on th...
interpret and organize information in a way which leads to the development of a stable idea of "self". They note that Erikson (196...
to strict behaviorism either, and nor did he support the traditional therapeutic model in which the client had a mainly passive ro...
creativity (Wilderdom, 2004). Piaget presented four stages of cognitive development to explain how children learn and develop. Pi...
homeless teens as indicative of a larger problem (Wagner 16). Wagner explains it this way: " With their economy in shambles, many ...
and similarity" (Kipke et al, 1997, p. 655). Within the forming of these friendships is also a climate of greater importance with...
medical attention if they were identified as organ donors (Minniefield, 2002). One hundred percent of the 25 to 35 years olds expr...
adolescents there were no real treatment alternatives for these children (Brent, 2004). The common belief, in fact, was that thos...
29 percent of the entire group of patients at the beginning of the study (Weeks, 2004; NIMH, 2005). This rate was reduced in all f...
"hyperlipidemia, hypertension, blood glucose disturbances, Type 2 diabetes, sleep apnea and asthma," while emotional effects inclu...
psychotherapy declined. Psychotherapy is often an expensive and prolonged process, which is why Olfson, et al, posit that increase...
mental illness. One area of practice where this factor in Christian psychiatric practice may prove effective is in regards to the...
public heath reform during the past two centuries ("Curricula - The Public Health Project," 2000). During the nineteenth and twent...
women, despite their success; women still are faced with doing the majority of tasks around the home, no matter how busy their pro...
describe the other elements that were at play in the educational process. These invisible elements, the so-called "hidden curricu...
In eight pages the concept of deviance is examined in terms of definition and relevant sociological theories in order to make a de...
much sugar remains in the blood and too little energy is transferred to other cells. The diabetic needs to take externally adminis...