YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Post Traumatic Stress Disorders and Alcoholism
Essays 61 - 90
This research paper offers description of several different approach to treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The ...
This paper begins by offering a diagnosis for an individual who suffered a trauma. The diagnosis is post-traumatic stress disorder...
This research paper presents empirical information that the student can use to develop group therapy that addresses the needs of v...
world in which they live and these changes in cognition may lead to co-morbid conditions, such as alcohol or drug addiction (Willi...
large, multifaceted group that is its own entity in a sense. After all, we tend to prescribe certain qualities and judgments to so...
results (Posen, n.d.). When the rats were examined, they had "swollen and hyperactive adrenal glands, shrunken immune tissue (thym...
therapy is a particularly useful approach in helping Iraqi war veterans deal with - and ultimately put aside - the intrusive prese...
well, and is defined as a psychiatric disorder that can occur following the experience of witnessing a life-threatening event such...
Checking to make sure the light switch is turned off even though the light bulb is not illuminated, locking and unlocking doors se...
will make up for what the sexual abuse compromised during the formative years, this search most often leads to a superficial fix t...
p. 5). Nevertheless, the fact that a diagnostic criteria is listed in the book, detailed and complex, tends to encourage the perce...
In twelve pages the types and brain conditions causing amnesia are first discussed with a description of how memory and the brain ...
yet is easy to neglect. It is also essential to recall that, like (classical) Naturopathic medicine, classical Chinese medicine w...
than verbal descriptions (Frey, n.d.). 3. Avoidant symptoms: The patient attempts to reduce the possibility of exposure to anythin...
There are many differences between the two latest versions of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. The diffe...
indicates that, "Genetics and family history are increasingly thought to play a significant role in whether a person develops alco...
lifetime, 27% of the population will suffer from a substance abuse disorder....Ninety five percent of alcoholics die of their dise...
in terms of goals and objectives (Weiss 1998). To clarify what is meant by "teams," Jon R. Katzenback and Douglas K. Smith offer t...
to all sorts of illnesses, such as heart attacks. This type of stress continues to release different hormones which results in the...
often takes more than 20 years for the effects of cigarette smoke to develop into a detectable malignancy" (p. PG). II. ADOLESCEN...
They do not see society on its best behavior. They are not able to have the joys that some occupations have. "Its not amazing th...
This paper intends to provide an overview of different aspects of stress, including definition, dimensions, work and stress, envir...
stress, which causes fluctuating levels of neuro-endocrine responses (Taylor, Repetti and Seeman, 1997). To understand this concep...
ever been exposed to. As he grows to realize it is his family displaying the dysfunctional behavior and not that of his friends, ...
Disorders (DSM-IV) of the American Psychiatric Association outlines the criteria for making a diagnosis of ADHD (Wilens, 1998). Ac...
This paper consists of five pages and from an attachment theory perspective discusses how youth attachment can lead to later socia...
This research paper focuses on the topic of information processing and how it is relevant to dyslexia and traumatic brain injury. ...
226) and occurs in as much as 26 percent of the adolescent population, and include alcohol, tobacco and illegal substance use. Su...
when one considers the premise that depression has been associated with reproductive factors, including a womans menstrual cycle ...
(Rowney, Hermida and Malone, 2009). Comorbidity is common with both generalized anxiety disorder and panic attacks with overlappin...