Minggu, 16 September 2012

An Analysis On Mental Health Disorders

by Center for American Progress Mental health refers to emotional well being and the ability to live life with stability and creativeness. Mental he

Mental Health Disorders Factline
Mental Health Disorders Factline

by Center for American Progress

Mental health refers to emotional well being and the ability to live life with stability and creativeness. Mental health consists of both physical and emotional fitness. For living mentally fit it is essential to live healthy physically also. For saving yourself from any related disorders you are required to know about the perfect balance between physical and emotional health. If you want to get complete health then it is important to understand the complete understanding about this important part of your life.

People can suffer from various problem of mental health regard less of their age, gender, status and background. This sort of illness affects the capability of people to maintain healthy relations and live a normal life.

Here is given some common types of mental health disorders and their symptoms which generally affect:

Depression: You can very easily find people undergoing depression due to some or the other reason. Depression leads to loss of fun and pleasure and affects men and women of every age. The common symptoms of depression are feeling alone and sad, disturbance, sudden change in mood and anxiety. Although many of us undergo these symptoms but when these are subsisted over a period of life then it can be depression and needs intervention.

Schizophrenia: It is a severe mental health disorder and is consist of strange behavior and delusions and needs professional health. If someone you know or someone in your family is suffering from Schizophrenia then approach a psychiatrist who can provide the required help.

Mental Health Disorders Factline
Mental Health Disorders Factline
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psychological problems, adult mental health, psychological assessment ...

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Commonly question about An Analysis On Mental Health Disorders

Question :

Would this be a correct analysis of Ankaboot today ? (made one year before)?

this was an analysis of Ankaboot made by a user one year before, Do you think it applies to him today why or why not?


{{It s not even a guy and yes, there is a mental health disorder involved. It is not "mad" as in "certifiably insane," but "he" is angry in that character and a few others. It s someone with multiple personality disorder who has multiple characters posting in this forum. The anger the person is not allowed to express in real life in the abusive household she is trapped in, is expressed in these different personalities. The jinn being talked about our the internal demons this person is battling.

There is anger at Islam and other Muslims in these characters because Islam is used as the justification for her abuse in the place where she is trapped. The person is also jealous of some others, really without cause, but based on her insecurities which are deep because of the abusive upbringing.

Through these characters too, the person is constantly calling out for help in the situation. She wants to be free from it, but as I said, she is trapped. I have talked to this person several times in several different characters. I know from how the conversations go that it is the same person, we talk about the same things and the person has knowledge of me and someone else (the person I think it is), these characters would otherwise not have. I wish so much I could rescue this person from where she is trapped, but it is not time yet. Allah decide the plan.

Edit: I read other answers. His wife, lol. The one he says he has or the one he says he s gonna marry? And "his" questions, someone talked about, do have hidden meanings and some of them are very deep. The person behind these characters has a deep knowledge of Islam and is spiritually gifted. It will be awesome when healing and recovery have advanced enough to bring this person s multiple identities back into one personality, because this person has some incredible gifts to share with the world



http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;

Do you agree or disagree?
Answer :
Ah, the old days.. I remember some of the users who used to be regulars.. : (

Back to the question,

analysis of a person upon observation is indeed evident, but not always correct. It s common for a person to behave differently in many situations, taking a User here as an example might be helpful. Ankaboot on the forum is different, you may notice his strange questions that sometimes you cannot understand, but when talking to him, he is perfectly clear and comprehensible. Meeting him in person is also different.

I can say the same about you, and any other person. I might be calm and peaceful on this forum, but might be a trouble maker in person, who knows?

Source(s):

Question :

RAMADAN : Why do you think the usa faces so many people with depression and suicide?

THIS IS THE COUNTRY OF THE FREE RIGHT? where there is absolutely no distinction between men and women whatsoever.. no matter how justifiable some of you might see it.


Depression is a chronic illness that exacts a significant toll on America s health and productivity. It affects more than 21 million American children and adults annually and is the leading cause of disability in the United States for individuals ages 15 to 44.

Lost productive time among U.S. workers due to depression is estimated to be in excess of $31 billion per year. Depression frequently co-occurs with a variety of medical illnesses such as heart disease, cancer, and chronic pain and is associated with poorer health status and prognosis. It is also the principal cause of the 30,000 suicides in the U.S. each year. In 2004, suicide was the 11th leading cause of death in the United States, third among individuals 15-24.

In the United States 46% qualifies for a mental illness at some point

The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that it is the thirteenth-leading cause of death worldwide3 and the National Safety Council rates it sixth in the United States.4 It is a leading cause of death among teenagers and adults under 35.56 The rate of suicide is far higher in men than in women, with males worldwide three to four times more likely to kill themselves than females.78 There are an estimated 10 to 20 million non-fatal attempted suicides every year worldwide.9

Mental disorders can arise from a combination of sources. In many cases there is no single accepted or consistent cause currently established. A common belief even to this day is that disorders result from genetic vulnerabilities exposed by environmental stressors. (see Diathesisstress model). However, it is clear enough from a simple statistical analysis across the whole spectrum of mental health disorders at least in western cultures that there is a strong relationship between the various forms of severe and complex mental disorder in adulthood and the abuse (physical, sexual or emotional) or neglect of children during the developmental years.




WHAT S WRONG WITH THE FREE COUNTRY? CAN ANYONE see a correlation with some moral values that could be affecting the human s lives there?


WHY IS IT THAT IN A PLACE LIKE JORDAN THERE IS ONLY ONE DOCUMENTED SUICIDE SINCE THE YEAR 2000????

i mean THERE.. men and women have different roles.. you d think that they d want to kill themselves WAY MORE than the country that doesn t distinguish between men and women


don t just rely on shaytans whispers to you.. LOOK AT REALITY and realize that FACTS ARE FACTS and they re RIGHT IN FRONT of you and you re ignoring them
Answer :
bloody hell...you come from MA..... please tell me you are not a 5 ft high gnome called Eric !!!! aarrgggghhh

Source(s):

gnomophobic
Question :

Whats an analysis??

how would i write an analysis bout this how do you start?


Date: February 20, 2005
Contact: David Partenheimer
Public Affairs Office
(202) 336-5706


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PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS GREATLY UNDERDIAGNOSED IN HOSPITAL EMERGENCY DEPARTMENTS, STUDY FINDS
Underdiagnosis Contributing to Needless Emotional Suffering, Especially for Minorities and the Poor


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WASHINGTON New research offers dramatic evidence of how psychiatric disorders are underdiagnosed in hospital emergency departments, affecting an increasing number of Americans who rely on such facilities for much of their primary health care needs. The research appears in this months issue of the Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, published by the American Psychological Association (APA).

In their study involving more than 33,000 Caucasian and African American patients from three hospital emergency departments in the Midwest and South, psychologist Seth Kunen, Ph.D., Psy.D., from the Earl K. Long Medical Center and the Louisiana State University Emergency Medicine Residency Program and colleagues confirm earlier reports that a significant psychiatric underdiagnosis is taking place. The researchers observed a psychiatric rate of 5.27% among the emergency department patients, a rate far below the national prevalence rate of 20% to 28%.

Comparing national rates of various psychiatric disorders versus the observed emergency department rates, the researchers found the following:

mood disorders= 4% (national rate) versus 0.70% (emergency department rate)
anxiety= 11-16% versus 1.19%
substance use disorders = 7% versus 2.05%
tobacco use disorder= 25% versus .23%
organic psychosis (psychosis due to brain injury or disease)= diagnostic ratios ranging from 3:1 to 25:1 depending on age group and method of estimation
schizophrenia= 1.30% versus 0.32%
Both Caucasians and African Americans were underdiagnosed in the emergency departments, but the study found a much larger underdiagnosis for African Americans. The odds of Caucasians having a psychiatric diagnosis were 1.85 times that of African Americans and almost twice as many Caucasians as African Americans received a psychiatric diagnosis as the primary diagnosis. The researchers say there are several possible reasons for this disparity, including Caucasian physicians being more familiar with the mental disorder symptoms of Caucasians, the tendency of African Americans to be less trusting and less willing to disclose emotional problems to people of different racial groups, and physician bias.

The authors say it is possible that African Americans simply have fewer psychiatric disorders than Caucasians and that is the reason for the race disparity. However, because a much greater percentage of African Americans live in poverty than Caucasians and because there are strong correlations among variable such as poverty and illness, it would be more reasonable to expect the rate of psychiatric disorders among African Americans to be as high or higher than the rate among Caucasians, according to the authors. The authors also note that the observed race disparity may be limited to emergency departments that have a predominantly African American census.

To get a better understanding of the underdiagnosis phenomenon, the researchers conducted informal interviews with more than 50 emergency department physicians. The physicians cited lack of psychiatric expertise, a belief that many mental disorders are relatively unimportant threats to health, and the inability to provide continuity of care for their patients as major reasons that may contribute to underdiagnosis.

As emergency medicine moves from its historical origin as a trauma specialty to its developing role as a primary care provider for millions of people each year, the researchers say its imperative that emergency departments expand their staffs to include mental health professionals such as psychologists because hospital-based physicians may not have the training, interest, or time to deal with mental health issues.

The psychiatric underdiagnosing we have documented is potentially the most damaging for the more vulnerable minorities and the poor who rely on emergency departments for much of their primary health care needs, say the authors. This underdiagnosing contributes to needless emotional suffering because many of the more common disorders, such as depression and anxiety, respond well to psychotherapy and pharmacological interventions.


Article: Race Disparities in Psychiatric Rates in Emergency Departments," Seth Kunen, Earl K. Long Medical Center, Ronda Niederhauser, Regional West Medical Center, Patrick O. Smith, University of Mississippi School of Medicine, Jerry A. Morris, Nevada Mental Health Services, and Brian D. Marx, Louisiana State University; Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, Vol. 73, No. 1.

Full text of the article is available from the APA Public Affairs Office or at http://www.apa.org/journals/releases/ccp731116.pdf

Reporters: Lead author Seth Kunen, Ph.D., Psy.D., can be reached at (225) 358-3942 (LSU Emergency Medicine Residency Program in Baton Rouge) or by Email.


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The American Psychological Association (APA), in Washington, DC, is the largest scientific and professional organization representing psychology in the United States and is the worlds largest association of psychologists. APAs membership includes more than 150,000 researchers, educators, clinicians, consultants and students. Through its divisions in 53 subfields of psychology and affiliations with 60 state, territorial and Canadian provincial associations, APA works to advance psychology as a science, as a profession and as a means of promoting health, education and human welfare.





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2006 American Psychological Association
Office of Public Affairs
750 First Street, N.E. Washington, DC 20002-4242
Phone: 202-336-5700 TDD/TTY: 202-336-6123
Fax: 202-336-5708 E-mail
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Answer :
It appears that you are really asking about "assessment" rather than "analysis." Realizing that there is a problem is part of triage and diagnosis.

Better trained personnel and more comprehensive assessments upon admission are required.

Why you included the lengthy article is a bit mysterious - surely you can state your question succinctly.

good luck to you

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