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Essays 631 - 660
In ten pages this paper examines the DSM IV criteria as it applies to passive aggressive personality disorder. Fifteen sources ar...
consider that no one is immune from bipolar disorder. It can affect men, women and children at any stage of their lives. In a ch...
with attention; hyperactive behaviors; and impulsivity. Children who have this condition have great trouble concentrating and payi...
Post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) results from a...
a relatively new mental illness category. Gunderson (2001) explained that borderline personality disorder "is layered between neur...
year 1650 when Richard Burton, a scientist, wrote "The Anatomy of Melancholia" which was a work that detailed depression. In fact,...
A positive life leads to health in all areas, physically, mentally and spiritually. The negative side is a general lack of consist...
In a paper consisting of four pages the practice of including students who have emotional or behavior disorders in regular classro...
the social costs." The remedy has been to treat the victims of alcohol abuse rather than to challenge the strong economic and poli...
In seven pages this paper discusses reactive attachment disorder and the effects of family intervention therapy. Eight sources ar...
variety of immunologic features that are similar to autoimmune hypotheroidism, such as "high serum concentrations of antibodies ag...
for their future relationships and interactions (Pendry, 1998; Practice Notes, 1997). There are three conditions for attachment de...
inherent weakness of being 18 years old. Therefore, much of its information is out-of-date. Jensen, et al (1998) conducted a stu...
has a direct correlation with unattached disorders, with institutionalized children reflected as being particularly compromised in...
(i.e., taking more than an hour a day) or when they cause marked distress or significant impairment for the individual (Diagnostic...
Hurricane Katrina is one of the most recent examples of an event that resulted in PTSD among some victims. Szegedy-Maszak (2005) ...
environment which fed the development of the disease, relapse is not uncommon ("Schizophrenia," 2006). Complete recovery is a poss...
Is The American Psychiatric Association has specific guidelines for diagnosing PTSD, specifying that the ordeal which has t...
strikes first in the medial temporal lobe, memory recall, confusion and forgetfulness are typically the first identifiable symptom...
The Theoretical Base The theoretical base for this test is linked to the belief that behavioral and emotional problems often go h...
they are tired, or not getting enough sleep, they can quickly understand how a large number of people in the nation could make a b...
disorder, or a family history of anxiety and neuroticism" (Grinage, 2003). The body responds in measurable ways to various stress...
such that their motives are interpreted as malevolent, beginning in early adulthood and present in a variety of contexts" (DSM-IV,...
upon as wholly overwhelming. II. SUMMARY The individual conjures up a traumatic memory while the therapist counts from ...
for no real reason. Symptoms can include: Trembling...
Beyond that, however, is the fact that any student who is struggling with language will not be able to read and write as well as a...
shelters to get corpses out "as a sanitary measure," is how he puts it (Hayman et al). Even more gruesome was his description of t...
reckless driving, overspending, stealing). [Again, not including suicidal or self-mutilating behavior covered in Criterion 5] (Ame...
by using standard PTSD models there is a limiting of the understanding of the conditions that are suffered and that there is the ...
and school- or community-level factors associated with receiving a diagnosis of ADHD" According to recent...