YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Borderline Personality Disorder and Social Perspectives
Essays 31 - 60
In twenty five pages multiple personality disorder or disassociative identity disorder is described in terms of DSM IV classificat...
In ten pages DSM IV criteria is employed to define conduct disorder in a paper that distinguishes it from antisocial and border pe...
(DID) but the meaning of the disorder is based on the diagnosis that two or more personalities seem to reside within one person. D...
is used to categorize symptoms and disorders to aid in a standardized diagnosis between professionals. This has led to an industry...
make a primarily positive impact or a primarily negative impact in the workplace. Workplace productivity is affected by a...
(Sancar, 1999). It often begins as a defense mechanism to escape the pain of what is happening at the moment but as this defense i...
one of the primary causes of MPD, most especially when the trauma is related to child abuse. Findings over the last two decades i...
will make up for what the sexual abuse compromised during the formative years, this search most often leads to a superficial fix t...
defense mechanisms (Chapter Sixteen). They are difficult in therapy because their psychic structure is so poorly constructed; it ...
This paper examines social problems' causes and effects from a theoretical perspective in five pages....
contract, not smiling at appropriate times (Bressert, 2006). The incidence of shyness is much less than that of social phobia bu...
Security; Governance Rule of Law & Human Rights; Infrastructure & Natural Resources; Education; Health; Agriculture & Rural Develo...
sometimes revealing important information about the other identities (DSM-IV, 1994). The causes and signs of the disorder, then, ...
The term, personality, is difficult to define because different theorists define it in different ways. Allport, for example, belie...
In five pages this paper examines group social identity in a consideration of the personality conflict perspectives of Carl Rogers...
have applied Freudian and Jungian personality distinctions based on dream analysis as an element of understanding the spiritual an...
This paper consists of five pages and from an attachment theory perspective discusses how youth attachment can lead to later socia...
transitional object. The patient cannot begin new growth until the therapist finds a way to replicate the original form of symbio...
(Rowney, Hermida and Malone, 2009). Comorbidity is common with both generalized anxiety disorder and panic attacks with overlappin...
Intangible value-oriented qualities are also important in leadership, such as: Courage Strong sense of ethics and morality persona...
226) and occurs in as much as 26 percent of the adolescent population, and include alcohol, tobacco and illegal substance use. Su...
In ten pages this paper considers 6 articles on thought and mood disorders including phobias, major depression disorder, generaliz...
of flawed findings that other methods might produce. It is a matter of personal opinion which data collection method a social psy...
as a central tenet to professional practice (Hanks, 2010). Both the American Nurses Association (ANA) Code of Ethics and the Code ...
process, each person may exhibit different behaviors when grieving. This is also true to the amount of time the person feels grief...
Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) is a very specific type of cognitive behavioral psychotherapy developed by Marsha M. Linehan to...
a juxtaposition of opposites" (Hannush, 2007, p. 7). II. THERAPEUTIC APPROACH Dialectical behavior therapy utilizes many of the ...
help the company increased sales, reduce costs, or improved profits then there is a potential argument that corporate social respo...
* Extraverted Sensing (BSM Consulting, 2006). * Introverted Sensing (BSM Consulting, 2006). * Extraverted Intuition (BSM Consultin...
and Bernstein, 2007, p. 78). While Eysenck apparently did not develop his theory of behavior specifically with regard to crime, la...