Depression And Suicide In Teenagers

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Teen Depression & Suicide

This video includes a serialized facts about depression and suicide.

The points of Discussion on this Video :
It is entirely normal to feel "blue" occasionally, or to feel down for a while after something bad happens.
For teenagers (or anyone for that matter) with major depression however...
feelings of sadness and hopelessness may last for weeks or months and can eventually dominate their lives
Unfortunately, most teens with mental health problems do not get the help they need
And when depression isn't treated, it can get worse, last longer...
...and prevent teens from getting the most out of life
Major depression strikes about 1 in 12 adolescents

All too often, depression is left untreated because people fail to recognize the symptoms and believe that it is just normal sadness, a phase that a teen is going through, or a sign of weakness.
And
This can Be a Terrible mistake






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Causes of Depression

Saturday, August 23, 2008

Depression is not occur by a single reason , frequently it proceed from a combination of things.

Depression is not only a state of mind and nothing more than this!, Whatever the cause. It is related to physical changes in the brain, and an imbalance related to a chemical signals in your brain and nerves.
These chemicals are hold as "neurotransmitters".

Some of the factors most common in depressions are as follows:

* The physical status. Serious medical conditions such as heart disease and cancer can lead to depression, because of physical weakness highlight them. Depression medical conditions may be worse because it weakens the immune system and pain can be difficult to bear. In some cases, depression may be caused by drugs for the treatment of diseases.

* changes in the circadian rhythm. The REM stage of sleep, in which dreaming happen, tends to be soon arrived, and especially intense, for depressed people. Although the precise relationship between sleep and depression is obscure , it appears to be strong among those whose depressive episodes are not taking place by unusual stress. In such cases, clients may be unaffected by therapeutics .

* Stress and shocks . like termination of a relationship, the financial problems, or death of a loved person . You can get depressed by changes in your own life, such as the engendering of a new workstation, the end of the school, or new marriage .
* History of the Family . Genetics plays an vital role in creating depression. It can be used in families for a generations.

* Pessimistic personality. People have little self and a negative view Outlook are subjected to a very high risk of being depressed. These properties by a low level of depression .

* Other disorders. Anxiety disorders, eating disorders, schizophrenia, and drug abuse are expose to depression.


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Watching the Olympics Reduce Your Depression?

Can Watching the Beijing Olympics Reduce Your Depression?

Michael Phelps referred to his mother as his true inspiration. And you can see the love in her eyes as she sits in the grandstands and watches her son. You can see his eyes search for her after he wins a race. Who in your life has shown you such devotion and love? If it wasn't your mother or if you have trouble thinking of someone in particular, you may begin to feel jealous or perhaps unloved. If you have problems with depression, you might even begin to feel worse.

However, you can also use this opportunity to help you reduce your depression by thinking about this example in a different way. This is a strategy for reducing the power of your depression even though none of the stress in your life has lessened. Search your own history for that one person who stood by your side and thought you were "the best." Remember a teacher, a grandparent, a coach or a kind neighbor. Remember someone who looked at you with love and devotion. If that person is no longer with you, don't fall into the trap of feeling lonely because they are gone. Instead, count yourself as one of the lucky ones to have been so loved. Focus on how that felt, to be loved. Try to remember the energy that comes from a relationship of love and devotion (like Michael Phelps and his mother). Think of how that energy can inspire you to "be the best you can be" today.

When your mood begins to flag, remind yourself of this once loving relationship. Again, bring back the pleasurable experience of feeling loved. Again, focus on the energy that comes from an inspiring relationship. Again, remember Michael Phelps-his strength, his vigor, his joy at seeing his mother's loving gaze. Imagine yourself having your own personal success.

Even if you are in a wheelchair, bedridden, weighed down by life stresses, overcome with sadness over a recent loss, or having severe financial problems, you can still recapture the energy of a loving relationship. Be the best you can be today and take pride in that. Find your true inspiration.


By Pamela Lipe, M.S. Licensed Psychologist
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Pam_Lipe


That was a really exciting article which I determine to Discuss Here ..
The main point for me was that : " no body have to keep himself sad or jealous , while he can be blissful and feel loved person " ..
Every body of us have to ask himself the a question like that : " why I am keeping myself on the extent of the audience ? why I am not trying to be the one I am looking for ? "..
Well ..
We can name it a kind of idleness " spiritual ,mental idleness " , with the probability of being active, Exactly.. more active as I think ..
It's just like a cold war between needs and goals and just the weak person will keep falling on .. so bad to feel weak isn't it ??

By : Abo ..
http://no4depression.blogspot.com/


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Lie detecting

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Lie defectives

The truth shall set you free, but finding it is no piece of cake

Oh what a tangled web we weave, when trying to determine who deceives. Virtually everyone, even those experienced at dealing with deceivers, detect others’ lies no better than would be expected by chance

Those sobering conclusions come from the first large-scale analysis of individual differences in deception detection. It takes two to tangle in deceptive encounters, note Charles Bond Jr. of Texas ChristianUniversity in Fort Worth and Bella DePaulo of the University of California, Santa Barbara. The two psychologists say their analysis of the findings to date suggest some people are relatively easy to read, while others shroud their intentions in mystery

A person’s perceived credibility, as reported by volunteers on questionnaires, rather than honesty, plays a major role in whether that person gets branded as a liar, Bond and DePaulo report in the July Psychological Bulletin. Certain people appear either honest or dishonest from the get-go, whether or not they’re telling the truth, the psychologists assert. Earlier research has found that baby-faced people seem credible whereas people who look nervous or avert their gaze typically get labeled untrustworthy

The new analysis shows that participants more often believe liars perceived as high in credibility than truth-tellers regarded as low in credibility

“When all the evidence is statistically analyzed, deception judgments depend more on the liar than the judge,” Bond says

The new investigation challenges a view, championed by psychologists Maureen O’Sullivan of the University of San Francisco and Paul Ekman of the University of California, San Francisco, that a small number of individuals with considerable experience in unraveling certain kinds of lies do so with great accuracy. O’Sullivan and Ekman have found that a minority of psychotherapists quickly discerns lies about what a person says he or she is feeling, whereas insightful police officers readily discern a suspect’s crime-related deceits

“There are significant differences among individuals in lie detection accuracy if you pick your subjects appropriately,” O’Sullivan says

Bond and DePaulo disagree. They devised a new statistical method for estimating the range in the percentage of lies and truths that groups of volunteers would accurately identify if a lie-detection test was infinitely long. The technique corrects for measurement errors that occur on standard lie-detection tests, especially those requiring only a few true-or-false judgments

The researchers applied this statistical tool to data from 142 earlier laboratory studies of lie detection. In these investigations, 19,801 judges assessed the veracity of 2,945 people conveying either true or false information. Many studies involved only college students as either judges or potential liars, but a substantial minority consisted of people with real-world lie-detection experience who were making deception judgments relevant to their professions


Overall, participants accurately detected lies an average of 54 percent of the time, when an overall average of 50 percent would be expected by chance. This figure aligns with what researchers already knew

But Bond and DePaulo focused on an individual’s performance, not a group average. They found that the highest detection rate achieved by an individual in these studies, which peaked at about 75 percent, did not exceed the maximum rate that guessing would have yielded, the researchers say. Individual differences in lie-detection accuracy were small, with scores clustering near the overall average of 54 percent correct

Experienced judges displayed no lie-detection advantage over inexperienced ones. Neither did judges show greater accuracy in evaluating highly motivated liars, such as crime suspects, compared with less-motivated liars, such as college students pretending to have stolen money

The researchers also found that the tendency to label someone as a liar also depended on whether a judge regarded other people as generally truthful or not

Bond and DePaulo call for experiments that examine the complexity of real-world lie detection. Outside the laboratory, people infer deception from many lines of information, not just a person’s immediate behavior and speech, they say. In these situations, lies get identified over days, weeks or longer, rather than at the time a lie is told

O’Sullivan also sees a need for research that addresses such issues. But she maintains that some people, due to their professional experiences, can quickly detect certain types of lies. In a new study submitted for publication, she and her colleagues find that experienced police officers rapidly identify high-stakes lies told by actual crime suspects far more often than they identify low-stakes lies told by students


source : http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/33854/title/Lie_defectives


A brief comment:

It was a kind of eloquence to raise the start by this sentence:

The truth shall set you free, but finding it is no piece of cake


actually .. the article was associated to such a words very strongly ..

as we see many people have always to leave an impression in such a positive manner and yet the peoples response is nothing ..

we can lay this back to some other factors ,, a factors which may be related to self-interest, national interest, commonweal

a very important point that most of us receive messages over falsehood. Despite that are socialized from the moment we can talk to believe that it is always better to tell the truth, actually, the company encourages and rewards often even deception. See late for a meeting early in the morning at work and it's best not to admit that you overslept. "You are punished much more than they would if you lie and say he was stuck in traffic," says Saxony. Moreover, lying is an integral part of many professions. Imagine how much we often see lawyers construction theories on behalf exaggerated their clients or distort the journalists themselves in order to get access to good stories.

Best Regards ..
Abo, http://no4depression.blogspot.com/2008/08/lie-detecting.html


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Depression and human brain

Many well-known therapists believe that ;biological and psychological factors both play a large and affective Role .

Here - In the post of today - we will try to Deal with the biological side ..

Feelings of depression are caused by a chemical change that affects how the brain functions.

A normally functioning brain is a giant messaging system that controls everything from your heartbeat, to walking, to your emotions. The brain is made up of billions of components with called "nerve cells" or "neurons" . These nerve cells send and receive messages from the rest of all your body, using brain chemicals "neurotransmitters" .

These chemicals in the human brain are responsible for our emotional state. Depression happens when these chemical messages are not correctly send or received between brain cells, which affect the communication.

(i. e., A telephone): If your telephone has a weak signal, you can't hear the person on the other end. so it is disabled or unclear.

There is also good news for the people who already suffering such a feeling, it is that there are many forms of treatment that can help them cope with depression, including medications that can fortify feeble signals by raising the levels of certain neurotransmitters, or by improving the nerve cells ability to process signals. This ensures that the brain’s vital messages are delivered—loud and clear.


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Brief report about ;Age and gender differences in depressive symptomatology

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Age and gender differences in depressive symptomatology and comorbidity: an incident sample of psychiatrically admitted children

By :
Merete Juul Sbrensen, Judith Becker Nissen, Ole Mors, Per Hove Thomsen

From :
Journal of Affective Disorders 84 (2005) 85–91

Note :
Use the list which will appear in the right side to explore the report ; Background, Aim, Method, Results and Discussion ..

Let yourself see It "Click Here"

Is It Was Useful for you , plz tell in a comment , or subscribe for the newest


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Adolescent Girls: The Role of Depression in the Development of Delinquency

Monday, August 18, 2008

Adolescent Girls: The Role of Depression in the Development of Delinquency ;
Summary of research

By :
Dawn A. Obeidallah and Felton J. Earls

The source :
National Institute of Justice


Much of the research on criminal activity and delinquency, however, has been conducted on men and boys; far less scholarly attention has focused on understanding the development of such behavior in women and girls. This remains the case today, despite recent reports indicating the rate of increase in troubled adolescent girls’ antisocial behavior surpasses that of boys.

Click Here for the full Research ..


ًًI am Looking forward To your Affective criticisms and supportings ..


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A New National Trends in the Outpatient

Sunday, August 17, 2008

By :
Mark Olfson; Steven C. Marcus; Benjamin Druss; et al.

The source :
American Medical Association


DEPRESSIVE DISORDERS are highly prevalent in the United States.
Results from 2 large communitybased mental health surveys, the National Institute of Mental Health Epidemiologic Catchment Area (ECA) survey (1980-1982) and the National Comor-bidity Survey (NCS) (1990-1992), suggest that the 1-year prevalence of major depression in the adult population is between 5.0%1and 10.3%.
Cross-national epidemiologic research fur-ther suggests that major depression is
common in Europe, Canada,NewZeal-and, and, to a lesser extent, Taiwan and
Korea.
Click Here To Get The Full Research ..


Best Regards


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Online Screen Test for Depression

Friday, August 15, 2008

A screening test is a test for a particular disease given to patients who have
no signs (that is, are "asymptomatic"). Screening tests are generally cheap;
they are designed to be sensitive (detect lots of possible cases of the disease)
..

Therefore .. It was Important To do so In Psychology - especialy - on Depression measures ..
Overall , It is Easy, Cheap And Important Way to Diagnose The Extent of Depression ..

You Can Click Here To Start The Test ..


Provided From : med.nyu.edu/


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The Importance of " Cognitive Therapy "

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Cognitive Therapy for Depression

By :

STUART J. RUPKE, M.D., DAVID BLECKE, M.DIV., M.S.W., and MARJORIE RENFROW, M.D.
Michigan State University College of Human Medicine, East Lansing, Michigan

Cognitive therapy is a treatment process that enables patients to correct false self-beliefs that can lead to negative moods and behaviors. The fundamental assumption is that a thought precedes a mood; therefore, learning to substitute healthy thoughts for negative thoughts will improve a person’s mood, self-concept, behavior, and physical state. Studies have shown that cognitive therapy is an effective treatment for depression and is comparable in effectiveness to antidepressants and interpersonal or psychodynamic therapy.

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A Novel Clinical Intervention for Severe Childhood Depression and Anxiety

By :

VICKY FLORY
Australian Catholic University

ABSTRACT

A novel clinical intervention, Emotionally Attuned Parenting, was developed and trialed for severe childhood depression and anxiety. The intervention was designed to alleviate child psychopathology by improving quality of parenting. Parents of eleven children aged between 6 and 13 years who were outpatients in a public mental health service completed treatment. Parents received between 5 and 13 treatment sessions that aimed to increase parental empathy and improve emotional care of the child. T-test analyses revealed that the intervention was related to a significant reduction in psychiatric disorders, child-reported depression and anxiety, parenting stress, and a marginally significant reduction in child behaviour problems. Data available for five cases at 6 months follow-up indicated that gains were maintained. Implications of results for treatment of severe childhood psychiatric disorders and the role of parental empathy are explored.

KEYWORDS

childhood psychopathology, comorbidity, depression, parental empathy, treatment

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Anxiety (INTRODUCTION)

Anxiety, emotional state in which people feel uneasy, apprehensive, or fearful. People usually experience anxiety about events they cannot control or predict, or about events that seem threatening or dangerous. For example, students taking an important test may feel anxious because they cannot predict the test questions or feel certain of a good grade. People often use the words fear and anxiety to describe the same thing. Fear also describes a reaction to immediate danger characterized by a strong desire to escape the situation.

The physical symptoms of anxiety reflect a chronic “readiness” to deal with some future threat. These symptoms may include fidgeting, muscle tension, sleeping problems, and headaches. Higher levels of anxiety may produce such symptoms as rapid heartbeat, sweating, increased blood pressure, nausea, and dizziness.

All people experience anxiety to some degree. Most people feel anxious when faced with a new situation, such as a first date, or when trying to do something well, such as give a public speech. A mild to moderate amount of anxiety in these situations is normal and even beneficial. Anxiety can motivate people to prepare for an upcoming event and can help keep them focused on the task at hand.

However, too little anxiety or too much anxiety can cause problems. Individuals who feel no anxiety when faced with an important situation may lack alertness and focus. On the other hand, individuals who experience an abnormally high amount of anxiety often feel overwhelmed, immobilized, and unable to accomplish the task at hand. People with too much anxiety often suffer from one of the anxiety disorders, a group of mental illnesses. In fact, more people experience anxiety disorders than any other type of mental illness. A survey of people aged 15 to 54 in the United States found that about 17 percent of this population suffers from an anxiety disorder during any given year.


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Phobic disorder or neurosis

Phobias are neurotic states accompanied by intense dread of certain objects or situations that would not normally have such an effect. This type of anxiety is associated with a strong desire to avoid the dreaded object or situation. About six per 1,000 of the population suffer from a phobic disorder. There is a tendency for phobic symptoms, whatever their nature, to persist for many years unless treated, and the avoidance behaviour they produce can seriously limit the affected individual's movements and his social or occupational functioning. People can have phobias about many different kinds of objects or situations, but three main divisions of phobic syndromes are made by the DSM-III: simple phobia, agoraphobia, and social phobia. Individuals with simple phobias may intensely fear a specific object or situation, for example, cats or thunderstorms; they have anxious thoughts upon anticipating contact with an object or event, for instance, upon hearing the weather forecast, and they try to avoid the object, as in staying indoors in order not to encounter a cat. Typically, agoraphobic patients have an intense fear of being alone in or being unable to escape from a public place or some other setting outside the home, such as a crowded bus or a supermarket. A social phobia is present when the individual has extreme anxiety in a social situation where he is under the scrutiny of others, such as eating in a restaurant or speaking at a meeting. The treatment of phobic disorders is best approached by the use of behavioral therapy; dynamic psychotherapy and antianxiety drugs may be effective in some cases.

mental disorder. (2008). Encyclopædia Britannica. Ultimate Reference Suite. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica.


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Social Phobia

Imagine going through your whole life in the constant fear of worrying about the others’ opinion for you, saying only such things which might approve you in the peer group and scared to go out in the public to escape the scrutinizing eyes of the people.

There are people who would rather prefer to stay at home for an endless time period than going out of their homes. Such people give importance to the thoughts of others so much that they tend to react accordingly and forget their natural behavior or attitude. There are people who constantly fear the prying eyes of the people when moving out in a public place.

Do you avoid parties and social get-togethers just because you don’t want to interact with the people? If you experience something like this then you should be careful since you must be gripped with social anxiety disorder. Social phobia or social anxiety disorder is a neurotic disorder where a person may feel uncomfortable to interact more often with people socially. According to a survey, out of the total number of people detected with social anxiety disorder there are just 25% of them who really go ahead for the treatment of the disease.

Social anxiety disorder although appears to be a very harmless looking disorder but actually it is a serious kind of nervous disorder that affects the behavioral pattern of a person to a great extent. Social anxiety disorder is a kind of social phobia in which a person has acute fear of eating, drinking, talking or being watched out in a public place like a gathering. People who suffer from social phobia encounter difficulties when speaking in public, eating and drinking in public, writing in front of others, meeting new people, being the centre of attention, being watched doing something, using the telephone or even when having to speak to authority figures.

It’s quite normal for some people to feel shy in public but if this shyness becomes a cause of concern, reaching to an extreme point then it surely becomes a cause for worry, a reason for medication. Yet shyness and social anxiety disorder are two different things. Shyness is a much generalized feeling of a person where as social anxiety disorder starts surfacing in particular situations like, a person may feel anxious to go and speak in public, some people are anxious to talk over a phone etc. The most important thing is that people who are suffering from social anxiety disorder know that their fears are unreasonable but still they can not overcome their fears.

Many times people who are suffering from social anxiety disorder tend to experience the clinical symptoms of anxiety like sweating, blushing, tense muscles or headaches when they confront their most dreaded social situations, for e.g. while giving a public speech.

People whose conditions have become worse can definitely seek medical help. But the thing is, though social anxiety disorder is a treatable disease, it is not a completely curable disease. Once the disorder is under control cognitive behavioral therapy must be tried by a qualified psychiatrist who can reduce this disorder by his psychological counseling too.

The social phobia should never be left untreated otherwise the sufferer becomes a person of low self esteem, low confidence, emotionally more dependent and financially poor too. So if you know any such person suffering from social anxiety disorder then help that person out by enlightening him on his condition, by providing him proper information about his condition, trying to give him medical care and most importantly make him realize that his condition is not just simply a state but a disease which needs treatment like any other form of diseaseFind Article, and therefore he would surely need the help of medications as well as the psychological counseling of a psychiatrist.


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phobia ..


an extreme, irrational fear of a specific object or situation. A phobia is classified as a type of anxiety disorder, since anxiety is the chief symptom experienced by the sufferer. Phobias are thought to be learned emotional responses. It is generally held that phobias occur when fear produced by an original threatening situation is transferred to other similar situations, with the original fear often repressed or forgotten. An excessive, unreasoning fear of water, for example, may be based on a forgotten childhood experience of almost drowning. The person accordingly tries to avoid that situation in the future, a response that, while reducing anxiety in the short term, reinforces the person's association of the situation with the onset of anxiety.

Behaviour therapy is often successful in overcoming phobias. In such therapy, the phobic person is gradually exposed to the anxiety-provoking object or situation in a controlled manner until he eventually ceases to feel anxiety, having realized that his fearful expectations of the situation remain unfulfilled. In this way, the strong associative links between the feared situation, the person's experience of anxiety, and his subsequent avoidance of that situation are broken and are replaced by a less-maladaptive set of responses. Psychotherapy may also be useful in the treatment of phobias.

Although psychiatrists classify phobias as a single type of anxiety disorder, hundreds of words have been coined to specify the nature of the fear by prefixing “phobia” with the Greek word for the object feared. Among the more common examples are acrophobia, fear of high places; claustrophobia, fear of closed places; nyctophobia, fear of the dark; ochlophobia, fear of crowds; xenophobia, fear of strangers; and zoophobia, fear of animals. Agoraphobia, the fear of being in open or public places, is a particularly crippling illness that may prevent its victims from even leaving home. School phobia may afflict schoolchildren who are overly attached to a parent. See also anxiety.



phobia. (2008). Encyclopædia Britannica. Ultimate Reference Suite. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica.


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ANXIETY DISORDERS


The fourth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, a handbook for mental health professionals, describes a variety of anxiety disorders. These include generalized anxiety disorder, phobias, panic disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and post-traumatic stress disorder.

A. Generalized Anxiety Disorder

People with generalized anxiety disorder feel anxious most of the time. They worry excessively about routine events or circumstances in their lives. Their worries often relate to finances, family, personal health, and relationships with others. Although they recognize their anxiety as irrational or out of proportion to actual events, they feel unable to control their worrying. For example, they may worry uncontrollably and intensely about money despite evidence that their financial situation is stable. Children with this disorder typically worry about their performance at school or about catastrophic events, such as tornadoes, earthquakes, and nuclear war.

People with generalized anxiety disorder often find that their worries interfere with their ability to function at work or concentrate on tasks. Physical symptoms, such as disturbed sleep, irritability, muscle aches, and tension, may accompany the anxiety. To receive a diagnosis of this disorder, individuals must have experienced its symptoms for at least six months.

Generalized anxiety disorder affects about 3 percent of people in the general population in any given year. From 55 to 66 percent of people with this disorder are female.

B. Phobias

A phobia is an excessive, enduring fear of clearly defined objects or situations that interferes with a person’s normal functioning. Although they know their fear is irrational, people with phobias always try to avoid the source of their fear. Common phobias include fear of heights (acrophobia), fear of enclosed places (claustrophobia), fear of insects, snakes, or other animals, and fear of air travel. Social phobias involve a fear of performing, of critical evaluation, or of being embarrassed in front of other people. See Phobia.

C. Panic Disorder

Panic is an intense, overpowering surge of fear. People with panic disorder experience panic attacks—periods of quickly escalating, intense fear and discomfort accompanied by such physical symptoms as rapid heartbeat, trembling, shortness of breath, dizziness, and nausea. Because people with this disorder cannot predict when these attacks will strike, they develop anxiety about having additional panic attacks and may limit their activities outside the home. See Panic Disorder.

D. Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

In obsessive-compulsive disorder, people persistently experience certain intrusive thoughts or images (obsessions) or feel compelled to perform certain behaviors (compulsions). Obsessions may include unwanted thoughts about inadvertently poisoning others or injuring a pedestrian while driving. Common compulsions include repetitive hand washing or such mental acts as repeated counting. People with this disorder often perform compulsions to reduce the anxiety produced by their obsessions. The obsessions and compulsions significantly interfere with their ability to function and may consume a great deal of time. See Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder.

E. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Post-traumatic stress disorder sometimes occurs after people experience traumatic or catastrophic events, such as physical or sexual assaults, natural disasters, accidents, and wars. People with this disorder relive the traumatic event through recurrent dreams or intrusive memories called flashbacks. They avoid things or places associated with the trauma and may feel emotionally detached or estranged from others. Other symptoms may include difficulty sleeping, irritability, and trouble concentrating. See Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.


Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2008. © 1993-2007 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.


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Anxiety (CAUSES )


Most anxiety disorders do not have an obvious cause. They result from a combination of biological, psychological, and social factors.

A. Genetics and Neurobiology

Studies suggest that anxiety disorders run in families. That is, children and close relatives of people with disorders are more likely than most to develop anxiety disorders. Some people may inherit genes that make them particularly vulnerable to anxiety. These genes do not necessarily cause people to be anxious, but the genes may increase the risk of anxiety disorders when certain psychological and social factors are also present.

Anxiety also appears to be related to certain brain functions. Chemicals in the brain called neurotransmitters enable neurons, or brain cells, to communicate with each other. One neurotransmitter, gamma-amino butyric acid (GABA), appears to play a role in regulating one’s level of anxiety. Lower levels of GABA are associated with higher levels of anxiety. Some studies suggest that the neurotransmitters norepinephrine and serotonin play a role in panic disorder.

B. Psychological Factors

Psychologists have proposed a variety of models to explain anxiety. Austrian psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud suggested that anxiety results from internal, unconscious conflicts. He believed that a person’s mind represses wishes and fantasies about which the person feels uncomfortable. This repression, Freud believed, results in anxiety disorders, which he called neuroses.

More recently, behavioral researchers have challenged Freud’s model of anxiety. They believe one’s anxiety level relates to how much a person believes events can be predicted or controlled. Children who have little control over events, perhaps because of overprotective parents, may have little confidence in their ability to handle problems as adults. This lack of confidence can lead to increased anxiety.

Behavioral theorists also believe that children may learn anxiety from a role model, such as a parent. By observing their parent’s anxious response to difficult situations, the child may learn a similar anxious response. A child may also learn anxiety as a conditioned response. For example, an infant often startled by a loud noise while playing with a toy may become anxious just at the sight of the toy. Some experts suggest that people with a high level of anxiety misinterpret normal events as threatening. For instance, they may believe their rapid heartbeat indicates they are experiencing a panic attack when in reality it may be the result of exercise.

C. Social Factors

While some people may be biologically and psychologically predisposed to feel anxious, most anxiety is triggered by social factors. Many people feel anxious in response to stress, such as a divorce, starting a new job, or moving. Also, how a person expresses anxiety appears to be shaped by social factors. For example, many cultures accept the expression of anxiety and emotion in women, but expect more reserved emotional displays from men.



Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2008. © 1993-2007 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.


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Anxiety (CAUSES )


Most anxiety disorders do not have an obvious cause. They result from a combination of biological, psychological, and social factors.

A. Genetics and Neurobiology

Studies suggest that anxiety disorders run in families. That is, children and close relatives of people with disorders are more likely than most to develop anxiety disorders. Some people may inherit genes that make them particularly vulnerable to anxiety. These genes do not necessarily cause people to be anxious, but the genes may increase the risk of anxiety disorders when certain psychological and social factors are also present.

Anxiety also appears to be related to certain brain functions. Chemicals in the brain called neurotransmitters enable neurons, or brain cells, to communicate with each other. One neurotransmitter, gamma-amino butyric acid (GABA), appears to play a role in regulating one’s level of anxiety. Lower levels of GABA are associated with higher levels of anxiety. Some studies suggest that the neurotransmitters norepinephrine and serotonin play a role in panic disorder.

B. Psychological Factors

Psychologists have proposed a variety of models to explain anxiety. Austrian psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud suggested that anxiety results from internal, unconscious conflicts. He believed that a person’s mind represses wishes and fantasies about which the person feels uncomfortable. This repression, Freud believed, results in anxiety disorders, which he called neuroses.

More recently, behavioral researchers have challenged Freud’s model of anxiety. They believe one’s anxiety level relates to how much a person believes events can be predicted or controlled. Children who have little control over events, perhaps because of overprotective parents, may have little confidence in their ability to handle problems as adults. This lack of confidence can lead to increased anxiety.

Behavioral theorists also believe that children may learn anxiety from a role model, such as a parent. By observing their parent’s anxious response to difficult situations, the child may learn a similar anxious response. A child may also learn anxiety as a conditioned response. For example, an infant often startled by a loud noise while playing with a toy may become anxious just at the sight of the toy. Some experts suggest that people with a high level of anxiety misinterpret normal events as threatening. For instance, they may believe their rapid heartbeat indicates they are experiencing a panic attack when in reality it may be the result of exercise.

C. Social Factors

While some people may be biologically and psychologically predisposed to feel anxious, most anxiety is triggered by social factors. Many people feel anxious in response to stress, such as a divorce, starting a new job, or moving. Also, how a person expresses anxiety appears to be shaped by social factors. For example, many cultures accept the expression of anxiety and emotion in women, but expect more reserved emotional displays from men.



Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2008. © 1993-2007 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.


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Fears and Phobias: A Brief Overview

Psychiatry identifies three different categories of phobia:

Agoraphobia is a fear of open spaces. It is also a fear of having a panic attack in a public place, of losing control in an area from which escape may prove difficult or embarrassing.

Social Phobia is an irrational anxiety brought forth by exposure to certain social situations, leading to avoidance behaviour.

Specific Phobia is a persistent and irrational fear in response to some specific stimulus, which commonly results in avoidance of/withdrawal from that stimulus. It could be triggered by an insect or animal (zoophobia), by a situation like being trapped in an enclosed space (claustrophobia) or it could be a fear of disease (pathophobia).

* Approximately 1 in 23 people suffer from phobias. That’s nearly 4.25% of the population. There are roughly 11.5 million sufferers in the US and 2.5 million in the UK.

* Approximately 19.1 million American adults aged between 18 and 54 (13.3% of people in this age group) in a given year have an anxiety disorder.

* 5.2 million Americans (aged 18 to 54) or 3.7% of people in this age group have social phobia.

* Approximately 3.2 million Americans have agoraphobia.

* Almost 6.2 million US citizens have some sort of specific phobia.

* All three types of phobia, social, agoraphobia and specific are likely to effect between 5 and 10 people in every 100.

* Females are more prone to irrational fears than males. Roughly twice as many women as men suffer from panic disorder, post traumatic stress disorder, generalised anxiety disorder and specific phobia though about equal numbers of women and men have obsessive-compulsive disorder and social phobia.

* In England in 2002-3, there were 310 hospital consultant episodes for phobic anxiety disorders. 94% required hospital admission. 40% were for men, 60% for women.

* Only about 20% of specific phobias disappear on their own for an adult.


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Understanding Social Phobia

Do you feel terribly uncomfortable attending social functions?

Does your throat feel as if it is closing if you have to speak in front of others? You may be one of the many people who suffer from social phobia.

Yes, that’s right. You’re not alone. There are plenty of others out there that suffer symptoms such as sweaty palms and racing heart when they enter a room full of people. Those who suffer from social anxiety disorder can get extremely nervous just being around other people, even people they know, not just strangers. They feel uncomfortable in any type of social situation. Often they cannot be around more than a couple of people at a time without experiencing extreme anxiety. Many social phobics prefer being alone and tend to live secluded lives.

This disorder affects millions of people although the majority of those who suffer from the condition feel that they are alone in their discomfort. They feel as if they don’t fit in anywhere. They may feel odd or different and somewhat out of sync with the rest of the world. Suffers of social anxiety disorder may be misdiagnosed with depression or post traumatic stress disorder although these conditions or combinations of them may accompany social anxiety disorder.

People who are afflicted with social phobia usually have a difficult time holding down jobs. They have difficulty interacting with others. They may be extremely sensitive and unable to accept criticism. Often they feel embarrassed and self-conscious. Such people may feel that others are constantly watching them.

Children and teenagers that tend to skip school or are unusually resistant in going to school should be evaluated for social anxiety disorder particularly if they exhibit other symptoms. Such people, adults and kids alike, usually have a hard time making friends. They are often shy as children, don’t like being the center of attention, avoid contact with others and may be very insecure.

Social phobics tend to worry excessively and they may suffer from other conditions such as panic attacks or obsessive-compulsive disorder. Almost twice as many females suffer from social anxiety disorder as males. There is no definitive explanation for the higher percentage in females nor is there any exact cause for the condition itself. The disorder is thought to be caused by an imbalance in the brain involving the chemical serotonin.

Social anxiety disorder can be treated with medications such as Paxil, sertraline and others but cognitive-behavior therapy seems to be what many believe to be the best course of action for social phobia. Cognitive-behavior therapy, which gradually teaches techniques to conquer fears and build self-confidence, has seen some success in treating the disorder though it is not widely used in many areas yet.

But for those who experience these symptoms and believe themselves to be suffering from social anxiety disorderScience Articles, don’t despair. You are not alone and there is help. Consult your physician if you think this condition may apply to you or someone in your family. He or she can direct you to proper diagnosis and treatment of the condition. Don’t continue to suffer but seek help instead.


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Alternative Treatment For Phobias

A phobia is an uncontrollable and irrational fear of an object or a situation, such as a fear of flying, or heights, or insects, a social phobia (fear of meeting people, of going to school), claustrophobia (fear of enclosed spaces), or agoraphobia (fear of going outside, of being away from the security of the home, or of being alone).

Most people have some phobia (it is estimated that about 10 percent of the population suffer from one or more phobias) but manage to keep it controlled either by avoiding the stimulus or by suppressing their fears.

Phobias are only serious when fear becomes disabling and begins to affect lifestyle to the extent that it has to be altered or normal situations avoided.

The causes of a phobia may be unknown or the result of an experience that has left a long-lasting impression. It can, however, be copied or adopted from parents, teachers, or carers, or very occasionally be the result of some organic disease, such as epilepsy or brain injury.

Panic and anxiety are also the result of low blood sugar, and can be more common in people with borderline diabetes or a sensitivity to sugar. Phobias can also be the result of prolonged stress (which in itself can cause blood sugar levels to drop), anxiety, or panic. Anxious, nervy, or easily stressed people are more vulnerable than others to phobias.

Symptoms of a phobia include overt fear and feeling overwhelmed when confronted with the object of that fear. Physical symptoms include breathlessness, palpitations, sweating, nausea, giddiness, and trembling. A sufferer may go to extreme lengths to avoid a confrontation with the object of their fear.Learning to CopeThere is some evidence that sufferers can help themselves, usually through graduated exposure.

In the case of a serious phobia, people are unable even to think about it. The first step is being able to do so, and then taking it one step further by drawing pictures of the object of a phobia, looking at pictures in a magazine, perhaps watching them on television, and so on.In the case of a situation phobia, like flying, it may be suggested that you go to the airport and watch airplanes taking off and landing. Then, on the next visit, you might go as far as the departure lounge (many airlines offer sessions for phobics and do not consider this unusual). On the third visit you might sit on an airplane, or try an electronically simulated flight. You will gradually learn to control your phobia.Take one step at a time. Draw lists, keep diaries that provide a record of your progress. Even when you find you are progressing at a very slow rate - some sufferers complain of taking two steps back for every one step forward - there are changes in your situation and your acceptance of it, and a diary makes them obvious. The key to overcoming a phobia is harnessing the panic, and with practice it is possible to do so.

Panic can be overwhelming, and it may appear uncontrollable, but in time you can learn to distance yourself from the feelings and learn how to turn them off. Many exposures to panic may be necessary to do so, but eventually it becomes clear that panic attacks do end and go away and that it is possible to master feelings about a phobic situation or object.

TreatmentPsychotherapy Treatment may involve relaxation techniques and desensitization.Homeopathy Treatment would be constitutional but specific remedies include: Borax and Sulfur for fear of heights; Lycopodium, GelsemiumArticle Search, and Anarcardium for stagefright and fear of performing in public.

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Facts about Social Phobia


People with social phobia have a persistent, intense, and chronic fear of being watched and judged by others and of being embarrassed or humiliated by their own actions.

Their fear may be so severe that it interferes with work or school—and other ordinary activities. While many people with social phobia recognize that their fear of being around people may be excessive or unreasonable, they are unable to overcome it. They often worry for days or weeks in advance of a dreaded situation.

Social phobia can be limited to only one type of situation—such as a fear of speaking in formal or informal situations, or eating or drinking in front of others—or, in its most severe form, may be so broad that a person experiences symptoms almost anytime they are around other people. Social phobia can be very debilitating—it may even keep people from going to work or school on some days. Many people with this illness have a hard time making and keeping friends.

Physical symptoms often accompany the intense anxiety of social phobia and include blushing, profuse sweating, trembling, and other symptoms of anxiety, including difficulty talking and nausea or other stomach discomfort. These visible symptoms heighten the fear of disapproval and the symptoms themselves can become an additional focus of fear.

Fear of symptoms can create a vicious cycle: as people with social phobia worry about experiencing the symptoms, the greater their chances of developing the symptoms. Social phobia often runs in families and may be accompanied by depression or alcohol dependence.

How Common Is Social Phobia?

About 3.7 percent of the U.S. population ages 18 to 54—approximately 5.3 million Americans—has social phobia in any given year. Social phobia occurs in women twice as often as in men, although a higher proportion of men seeks help for this disorder. The disorder typically begins in childhood or early adolescence and rarely develops after age 25.

What Causes Social Phobia?

Research to define causes of social phobia is ongoing. Some investigations implicate a small structure in the brain called the amygdala in the symptoms of social phobia. The amygdala is believed to be a central site in the brain that controls fear responses.

Animal studies are adding to the evidence that suggests social phobia can be inherited. In fact, researchers supported by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) recently identified the site of a gene in mice that affects learned fearfulness.

One line of research is investigating a biochemical basis for the disorder. Scientists are exploring the idea that heightened sensitivity to disapproval may be physiologically or hormonally based.

Other researchers are investigating the environment's influence on the development of social phobia. People with social phobia may acquire their fear from observing the behavior and consequences of others, a process called observational learning or social modeling.

What Treatments Are Available for Social Phobia?

Research supported by NIMH and by industry has shown that there are two effective forms of treatment available for social phobia: certain medications and a specific form of short-term psychotherapy called cognitive-behavioral therapy.

Medications include antidepressants such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs), as well as drugs known as high-potency benzodiazepenes. Some people with a form of social phobia called performance phobia have been helped by beta-blockers, which are more commonly used to control high blood pressure.

Cognitive-behavior therapy is also very useful in treating social phobia. The central component of this treatment is exposure therapy, which involves helping patients gradually become more comfortable with situations that frighten them. The exposure process often involves three stages. The first involves introducing people to the feared situation.

The second level is to increase the risk for disapproval in that situation so people build confidence that they can handle rejection or criticism.

The third stage involves teaching people techniques to cope with disapproval. In this stage, people imagine their worst fear and are encouraged to develop constructive responses to their fear and perceived disapproval.

Cognitive-behavior therapy for social phobia also includes anxiety management training—for example, teaching people techniques such as deep breathing to control their levels of anxiety. Another important aspect of treatment is called cognitive restructuring, which involves helping individuals identify their misjudgments and develop more realistic expectations of the likelihood of danger in social situations.

Supportive therapy such as group therapy, or couples or family therapy to educate significant others about the disorder, is also helpful. Sometimes people with social phobia also benefit from social skills training.

What Other Illnesses Co-Occur With Social Phobia?

Social phobia can cause lowered self-esteem and depression. To try to reduce their anxiety and alleviate depression, people with social phobia may use alcohol or other drugs, which can lead to addiction. Some people with social phobia may also have other anxiety disorders, such as panic disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder.


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How You Can Overcome Fear Of Driving?

Fear Of Driving Phobia Treatments - How You Can Conquer Fear Of Driving
Fear of driving is a terrible phobia as it cuts you off from important aspects of the modern life. However, it can be treated with a great deal of success and even eliminated completely. The number of people who suffer from driving phobia is enormous, but the number of people who conquered this fear is also impressive. If you suffer from fear of driving, know that there are treatment options for you.

1. The Fear of Driving program. This is a unique online program by Rich Presta, a former sufferer of driving phobia. Rich, after failing to overcome his fear by therapy, developed this guide to conquer fear of driving. It has helped many people. As it deals specifically with fear of driving, it is especially effective.

2. The Conquer Your Phobia program by John Richter, is an online program which deals with any phobia you may have. This program manipulates the very neural pathways in your brain which are making you more prone to fear. Many people have used this program with all sorts of phobias. It's not specific to driving phobia, so I think that the 1st program I reviewed is the better treatment for fear of driving, but Conquer Your Phobia is excellent for people with multiple phobias.

3. Therapy. Seeing a therapist can have excellent results, but it's usually a slow and expensive process. However, for some people talking with someone on their problems and fears is the thing they relate to most. If you can spare the cash and the time, this is an option worth considering.

I hope I've opened you eyes to treatments of driving phobia. I wish you luck and may you conquer your fear of driving soon.


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Anxiety (TREATMENT)


Mental health professionals use a variety of methods to help people overcome anxiety disorders. These include psychoactive drugs and psychotherapy, particularly behavior therapy. Other techniques, such as exercise, hypnosis, meditation, and biofeedback, may also prove helpful.

A. Medications

Common Psychotherapeutic Drugs

Psychiatrists often prescribe benzodiazepines, a group of tranquilizing drugs, to reduce anxiety in people with high levels of anxiety. Benzodiazepines help to reduce anxiety by stimulating the GABA neurotransmitter system. Common benzodiazepines include alprazolam (Xanax), clonazepam (Klonopin), and diazepam (Valium). Two classes of antidepressant drugs—tricyclics and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)—also have proven effective in treating certain anxiety disorders.

Benzodiazepines can work quickly with few unpleasant side effects, but they can also be addictive. In addition, benzodiazepines can slow down or impair motor behavior or thinking and must be used with caution, particularly in elderly persons. SSRIs take longer to work than the benzodiazepines but are not addictive. Some people experience anxiety symptoms again when they stop taking the medications.


B. Psychotherapy

Therapists who attribute the cause of anxiety to unconscious, internal conflicts may use psychoanalysis to help people understand and resolve their conflicts. Other types of psychotherapy, such as cognitive-behavioral therapy, have proven effective in treating anxiety disorders. In cognitive-behavioral therapy, the therapist often educates the person about the nature of his or her particular anxiety disorder. Then, the therapist may help the person challenge irrational thoughts that lead to anxiety. For example, to treat a person with a snake phobia, a therapist might gradually expose the person to snakes, beginning with pictures of snakes and progressing to rubber snakes and real snakes. The patient can use relaxation techniques acquired in therapy to overcome the fear of snakes.

Research has shown psychotherapy to be as effective or more effective than medications in treating many anxiety disorders. Psychotherapy may also provide more lasting benefits than medications when patients discontinue treatment.



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ANXIETY ..

a feeling of dread, fear, or apprehension, often with no clear justification. Anxiety is distinguished from fear because the latter arises in response to a clear and actual danger, such as one affecting a person's physical safety. Anxiety, by contrast, arises in response to apparently innocuous situations or is the product of subjective, internal emotional conflicts the causes of which may not be apparent to the person himself. Some anxiety inevitably arises in the course of daily life and is considered normal. But persistent, intense, chronic, or recurring anxiety not justified in response to real-life stresses is usually regarded as a sign of an emotional disorder. When such an anxiety is unreasonably evoked by a specific situation or object, it is known as a phobia. A diffuse or persistent anxiety associated with no particular cause or mental concern is called general, or free-floating, anxiety.

There are many causes (and psychiatric explanations) for anxiety. Austrian neurologist Sigmund Freud viewed anxiety as the symptomatic expression of the inner emotional conflict caused when a person suppresses (from conscious awareness) experiences, feelings, or impulses that are too threatening or disturbing to live with. Anxiety is also viewed as arising from threats to an individual's ego or self-esteem, as in the case of inadequate sexual or job performance. Behavioral psychologists view anxiety as a learned response to frightening events in real life; the anxiety produced becomes attached to the surrounding circumstances associated with that event, so that those circumstances come to trigger anxiety in the person independently of any frightening event. Personality and social psychologists have noted that the mere act of evaluating stimuli as threatening or dangerous can produce or maintain anxiety.

An anxiety disorder may develop where anxiety is insufficiently managed, characterized by a continuing or periodic state of anxiety or diffuse fear that is not restricted to definite situations or objects. The tension is frequently expressed in the form of insomnia, outbursts of irritability, agitation, palpitations of the heart, and fears of death or insanity. Fatigue is often experienced as a result of excessive effort expended in managing the distressing fear. Occasionally the anxiety is expressed in a more acute form and results in physiological symptoms such as nausea, diarrhea, urinary frequency, suffocating sensations, dilated pupils, perspiration, or rapid breathing. Similar indications occur in several physiological disorders and in normal situations of stress or fear, but they may be considered neurotic when they occur in the absence of any organic defect or pathology and in situations that most people handle with ease.

Other anxiety disorders include panic disorder, agoraphobia, stress and post-traumatic stress disorders, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and generalized anxiety.

anxiety. (2008). Encyclop?dia Britannica. Ultimate Reference Suite. Chicago: Encyclop?dia Britannica.


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Eating Disorders (from mental disorder)

Anorexia nervosa usually starts in late adolescence and is about 20 times more common in girls than boys. This disorder is characterized by a body weight more than 25 percent below standard, amenorrhea, a fear of loss of control of eating, and an intense desire to be thin. Though grossly thin, patients nevertheless believe themselves to be fat. They go to enormous lengths to resist eating food and to lose weight, including food avoidance, purging, self-induced vomiting, and vigorous exercise.

The condition appears to start with the patient's voluntary control of food intake in response to social pressures such as peer conformity. The disorder is exacerbated by troubled relations within the family. It is much more common in developed, wealthy societies and in girls of higher socioeconomic class. There is evidence that it has become more common in such countries since the 1960s.

Patient management includes three stages: persuading the patient to accept and cooperate with treatment, achieving weight gain by medical methods of care, and helping the patient maintain weight by psychological and social therapy. Bulimia nervosa refers to episodic grossly excessive overeating binges. These may alternate with episodes of self-induced vomiting. The disorder is a variant of anorexia nervosa.



mental disorder. (2008). Encyclop?dia Britannica. Ultimate Reference Suite. Chicago: Encyclop?dia Britannica.


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Eating Disorders (from nutritional disease)

Eating disorders such as anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa are serious health problems reflecting an undue concern with body weight. Girls and young women are most vulnerable to the pressures of society to be thin, although boys and men can also fall prey to these disorders, which have lifelong consequences and can even be fatal. The incidence of eating disorders has risen during the last 50 years, particularly in the United States and western Europe.

Anorexia nervosa is characterized by low body weight, propensity for drastic undereating, intense fear of gaining weight or becoming fat (despite being underweight), and a distorted body image. Consequences include impaired immunity, anemia, and diminished digestive function. Without intervention, a state of semi-starvation similar to marasmus may occur, requiring hospitalization and even force-feeding to prevent death. Treatment usually requires a coordinated approach, with the participation of a physician, psychiatrist, dietitian, and possibly other health professionals.

Bulimia nervosa is thought to be more prevalent than anorexia nervosa, and both disorders may even occur in the same person. In bulimia nervosa recurrent episodes of “binge eating” are followed by a form of purging, such as self-induced vomiting, fasting, excessive exercise, or the use of laxatives, enemas, or diuretics. Treatment usually involves a structured eating plan.

Young athletes often restrict energy intakes to meet weight guidelines and body-image expectations of their sport. Females are most affected, but male athletes, such as gymnasts, wrestlers, boxers, and jockeys, are also vulnerable. Intense training among young female athletes, coupled with food energy restriction, often results in amenorrhea (cessation of menstruation) and bone loss similar to that at menopause. Calcium supplementation may be required.


nutritional disease. (2008). Encyclop?dia Britannica. Ultimate Reference Suite. Chicago: Encyclop?dia Britannica.


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Eating Disorders (from nutritional disease)

Eating disorders such as anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa are serious health problems reflecting an undue concern with body weight. Girls and young women are most vulnerable to the pressures of society to be thin, although boys and men can also fall prey to these disorders, which have lifelong consequences and can even be fatal. The incidence of eating disorders has risen during the last 50 years, particularly in the United States and western Europe.

Anorexia nervosa is characterized by low body weight, propensity for drastic undereating, intense fear of gaining weight or becoming fat (despite being underweight), and a distorted body image. Consequences include impaired immunity, anemia, and diminished digestive function. Without intervention, a state of semi-starvation similar to marasmus may occur, requiring hospitalization and even force-feeding to prevent death. Treatment usually requires a coordinated approach, with the participation of a physician, psychiatrist, dietitian, and possibly other health professionals.

Bulimia nervosa is thought to be more prevalent than anorexia nervosa, and both disorders may even occur in the same person. In bulimia nervosa recurrent episodes of “binge eating” are followed by a form of purging, such as self-induced vomiting, fasting, excessive exercise, or the use of laxatives, enemas, or diuretics. Treatment usually involves a structured eating plan.

Young athletes often restrict energy intakes to meet weight guidelines and body-image expectations of their sport. Females are most affected, but male athletes, such as gymnasts, wrestlers, boxers, and jockeys, are also vulnerable. Intense training among young female athletes, coupled with food energy restriction, often results in amenorrhea (cessation of menstruation) and bone loss similar to that at menopause. Calcium supplementation may be required.


nutritional disease. (2008). Encyclop?dia Britannica. Ultimate Reference Suite. Chicago: Encyclop?dia Britannica.


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Adolescent Depression

Tuesday, August 12, 2008


Many of us think of teen years as moody, turbulentones. While it is true that most teenagers have emotional ups and downs, recent research suggests that such moodiness isn’t necessarily a normal part of the teen years. In fact, teens who seem sad or down for more than a few days may actually be experiencing depression. Don’t ignore behavior changes or write them off as phases of adolescence. If you notice any of the following symptoms, consider the possibility that the teen may be depressed and try to get help.

By :

Erin Morgan & Angela Huebner
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Association Of Depression And Gender With Mortality In Old Age

Thursday, August 7, 2008

A Research From : British Journal Of psychiatry ..
Results From the Amsterdam Study of the Elderly (AMSTEL)
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Depression What Is It !!

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Summary
· Depression is a biological disorder that is made worse by life stress.
· Depression has characteristic symptoms that affect a person's thoughts
feelings, and everyday functioning.
· Antidepressant drugs help relieve some of the symptoms but take time t
work.
· You and your friends and family can help overcome depression by keepin
busy, avoiding negative thinking, solving problems, and reducing stress.

Adapted, with permission from Falloon IRH, Depression: How to Cope with it, Buckingham Health Services; and Health Public Affairs, Department of Health, NSW.
Living with Mood
Swings — Manic Depressive Illness.
State Health Publication No (HP) 86-027, quoted in Andrews
G, Jenkins R, eds.
Managing Mental Disorders (UK edition) ; distributed for the publishers in the
UK by IN 2 Mail Ltd, Fax: +44 (0)1252 322315; PO Box 55, Aldershot, Hampshire GU21 4FP.
Sydney: World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Mental Health and Substance Abuse, 1999, and World Health Organization. Mental Disorders in Primary Care: a WHO Education Package, 1998.


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A Review of Functional Neuroimaging in Mood Disorders: Positron Emission Tomography and Depression

Saturday, August 2, 2008

By :
Sidney H Kennedy, MD, FRCPC1
, Mahan Javanmard, BSc2
, Franco J Vaccarino, PhD3
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