What is Classical Conditioning?
What is combat, war, disasters and accidents, and victimization (e.g., sexual assault).
Reduced need for sleep, increased talkativeness, grandiosity self-esteem, risky behavior, heightened agitated, hospitalization
What is a manic episode?
Suicide is the ___ leading cause of death for adults in the US
What is 10th?
What is self-care, exercise, health eating, good hygiene, therapy?
Periodic, short bouts of panic that occur suddenly, reach a peak within minutes, and gradually pass.
What is a Panic Attack.
This disorder was formerly known as Multiple Personality Disorder
What is Dissociative Identity Disorder?
Five symptoms of a major depressive episode
What is weight change, appetite change, sleeping issues, crying, feelings of worthlessness, helplessness, hopelessness, sadness, suicide, motor problems, guilt?
In the US, _______ (population) has the highest suicide rates among both males and females
What is American Indians?
A program that tries to identify people who are at risk of killing themselves and to offer them crisis intervention
What is suicide prevention program?
Like obsessions, compulsions take various forms such as (name 3).
What is Cleaning, checking, touching, verbal and counting compulsions.
Types (2) of treatment for PTSD
What is antidepressant drugs, CBT, couple and family therapy, and group therapy?
A disorder marked by repeated episodes of significant depression and related symptoms during the week before mentruation
What is premenstrual dysphoric disorder?
Women _____ suicide more while Men ______ at a higher rate
What is attempts and completed?
The milder/"little brother" episode of Bipolar I
What is hypomania?
People who are holding unrealistically high social standards and so believing that they must perform perfectly in social situations.
What is Social Anxiety Disorder?
People with Acute Disorder have symptoms for _____ while people with PTSD experience symptoms for ____
The perception, based on past experiences that one has no control over the reinforcements in one's life
What is learned helplessness?
A pessimistic belief that one's present circumstances, problems, or mood will never change
What is hopelessness?
These are two diagnostic criteria categories
What is intrusion symptoms, persistent avoidance of stimuli, negative alterations in cognition and mood, and increased arousal.
The DSM-5 created the group name Obsessive-Compulsive-Related Disorders and assigned these four patterns to that group:
What is Hoarding, trichotillomania (hair-pulling), exocriation (skin-picking) and body dysmorphic disorder.
When we face a dangerous situation, the hypothalamus first triggers the ________ system (fight system)
What is Sympathetic Nervous System?
Beck coined the term Cognitive Triad, which consists of a negative view of
What is one's experiences, oneself, and the future?
When immediately assessing someone for suicide what are the two main things to consider
What is ideation (thinking) or intention?
People with Agoraphobia fear situations such as
What is it would be hard to escape or get help if panic, embarrassment, or disabling symptoms were to occur?