"Difficulties of treating dissociative somatoform and mood disorders" Essays and Research Papers

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    mood disorders

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    Unfortunately‚ mood disorders are far too common especially during adolescent years.  Everything from sadness to severe depression‚ anxiety‚ bipolar‚ and panic attacks are just a few mood disorders that adolescents are effected with far too often. The social and academic pressures that adolescents undergo in schools such as  popularity‚ maintaining good grades‚ making important decisions‚ puberty‚ parent/adolescent relationships‚ staying thin can all be unbearable.  All of this causing these adolescents

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    Somatoform Disorders PSY/410 Somatoform DisordersSomatoform disorders are characterized by the presence of physical symptoms or concerns that are not due to a medical disorder” (Hansell & Damour‚ 2008‚ p. 224). Individuals who suffer from somatoform disorders experience symptoms of physical disease or defect when there is nothing wrong with their bodies medically. Factitious disorders are similar to somatoform disorder in that individual’s fake bodily symptoms to give others the perception

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    Dissociative Identity Disorder The mystery of a person’s personality has always intrigued me‚ so it was only natural that I was drawn to the topic of Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID). DID formerly known as multiple personality disorder is a condition in which a person has two or more personalities or identities. Out of all of the dissociative disorders DID is the most severe (1). 86 percent of patients who have DID reported that they had been sexual abused (1). It is important to get an early

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    MOOD DISORDER

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    such as mood disorders. When changes in mood and behavior affect a person so greatly‚ they can have a mood disorder. Common types of mental illnesses include major depression and bi-polar disorder. Mood disorders‚ also known as affective disorders‚ can be defined as a disturbance of mood that is not caused by a organic abnormality. This disorder also includes the appearance of an excessive "maniac" or "depressive" state that is not interfered by any of the other physical or mental disorders. Whatever

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    Mood Disorders

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    Mood Disorders Mood disorders are quite interesting; especially if you’re realizing that you have many of the symptoms. With mood disorders one experiences long periods of depression or elation‚ that causes ones everyday activities to be disrupted. The main mood disorders are major depression‚ and bipolar disorder. Another type of mood disorder is called seasonal affective disorder. This is caused by the lack of sunlight that people with the disorder receive in usually the winter months. Apparently

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    Jackie Ostrov 5/25/2008 Case Study 4: Hypochondria Axis I: Hypochondria is a Somatoform Disorder‚ because by definition “disorders in this category include those where the symptoms suggest a medical condition but where no medical condition can be found by a physician.” (http://allpsych.com/disorders/ somatoform/hypochondriac.html) Thus‚ the person may experience pain‚ which has no biological of physical cause. However‚ what distinguishes Hypochondria is the fact that the person who feels the

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    Moods disorders

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    Chapter 7 Review Mood disorders   I. DEPRESSION AND MANIA ARE THE KEY EMOTIONS IN MOOD DISORDERS: A. Depression—a low‚ sad state in which life seems dark and its challenges overwhelming B. Mania—a state of breathless euphoria or frenzied energy C. Most people with a mood disorder experience only depression 1. This pattern is called unipolar depression 2. There is no history of mania 3. Mood returns to normal when depression lifts D. Others experience periods of mania that alternate with

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     forever.  Things  for  Roseanne  weren’t  always   all  fame  and  glory  as  she  suffered  from  a  mental  illness  called   dissociative  identity  disorder  among  other  mental  illnesses.  Dissociative   identity  disorder  is  a  mechanism  created  to  disassociate  ones  self  from   traumatic  or  painful  events  that  usually  take  place  during

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    Dissociative Identity Disorder‚ also known as Multiple Identity Disorder‚ is when a person develops one or more alternate personalities or ‘alters’. D.I.D usually develops in a person who was sexually or physically abused as a child. A person with D.I.D can be completely unaware of his or her other personalities and may not be aware that they have D.I.D. There are no limits on how many alters a person with D.I.D can have. Studies reveal that people with Dissociative Identity Disorder can have multiple

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    Anxiety‚ Somatoform‚ and Dissociative Disorders Outline & Case Analysis The capacity for an individual to have normal socialization and daily function can be altered in disorders such as; anxiety disordersomatoform disorder‚ and dissociative disorder. Each disorder has varying biological‚ behavioral‚ emotional‚ and cognitive components; however‚ the symptoms in each of these disorders can overlap into another disorder. Identifying these components is important for abnormal psychology to develop

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