This type of assessment includes an inventory of risk and protective factors.
Suicide Risk Assessment
Diminished emotional expression or avolition.
Negative Symptom
Excessive motor activity when it is not appropriate, or excessive fidgeting, tapping, or talkativeness.
Hyperactivity
The essential feature of this disorder includes abrupt surges of intense fear or intense discomfort.
Panic Disorder
This disorder includes at least 1 episode of mania in the life course.
Bipolar I Disorder
Isolation, stigma, barriers to accessing health care, certain religious or cultural beliefs, over exposure to suicide in media, are all considered to be what type of risk factor for suicide?
Socio-Cultural
The following are considered which type of symptoms (when considering a psychotic disorder): delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech, disorganized behaviors, agitation
Hasty actions that occur in the moment without forethought and that have high potential for harm to the individual.
Impulsivity
This type of disorder typically follows a severe stressor (or traumatic event) and includes debilitating symptoms that resolve within a 1 month period of time.
Acute Stress Disorder
The following is criteria for which type of episode:
•persistent, lasting at least 1 week with 3+ of the following symptoms
•Inflated self-esteem (grandiose)
•Decreased need for sleep
•More talkative (pressured speech)
•Flight of ideas (racing thoughts)
•Easily distracted
•Increase in goal-directed behaviors or psychomotor agitation
•Excessive involvement in high risk activities
•Symptoms are so severe that they cause significant impairment in functioning (often results in hospitalization)
Mania or Manic Episode
This theory incorporates the political, psychological, social, spiritual, cultural, environmental, and biological aspect of ones life when addressing and indivudal.
Person In Environment PIE
This disorder includes an uninterrupted period of illness during which there is a major mood episode (major depressive or manic) concurrent with criterion A of Schizophrenia
Schizoaffective Disorder
This disorder presents with persistent impairment in reciprocal social communication and social interaction, as well as restricted, repetitive patterns of behavior, interests, or activities and presents in early childhood, limiting or impairing everyday functioning.
Autism Spectrum Disorder
Repetitive behaviors or mental acts that the individual feels driven to perform in response to an obsession or according to rules that must be applied rigidly.
Compulsion
This disorder includes the following:
•Depressed mood for most of the day (on most days) for at least 2 years (in children, depressed mood or irritability for at least 1 year) and include 2+ of the following symptoms:
•Disturbance of appetite
•Disrupted sleep
•Fatigue
•Poor self-esteem
•Problems focusing/concentrating
•Feeling hopeless
•Significant distress or impairment in functioning
Persistent Depressive Disorder or Dysthymia
Emerges from a place of hope; involving family, peers, community; comes in many pathways; holistic; person-driven; fosters respect, independence, empowerment.
Recovery Model
2 or more of these symptoms are present persistently for most of a 1 month period of time for which disorder:
delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech, disorganized or catatonic behavior, negative symptoms
Schizophrenia
Aging is a risk factor of this disorder, which can cause impairment in memory, attention, orientation, cognition and mood, and typically has a rapid onset in symptom presentation.
Delirium
This disorder includes the following diagnostic criteria:
Marked fear or anxiety about two (or more) of the following five situations:
Using public transportation (e.g., automobiles, buses, trains, ships, planes).
Being in open spaces (e.g., parking lots, marketplaces, bridges).
Being in enclosed places (e.g., shops, theaters, cinemas).
Standing in line or being in a crowd.
Being outside of the home alone.
Agoraphobia
The following are criteria for what type of episode:
•persistent, lasting at least 4 days with 3+ of the following symptoms
•Inflated self-esteem (grandiose)
•Decreased need for sleep
•More talkative (pressured speech)
•Flight of ideas (racing thoughts)
•Easily distracted
•Increase in goal-directed behaviors or psychomotor agitation
•Excessive involvement in high risk activities
•Symptoms are not severe enough to cause significant impairment in functioning
Hypomania or Hypomanic Episode
A pattern of observable behaviors that is the expression of a subjectively experienced feeling state (emotion). Examples include sadness, elation, and anger.
Affect
A chronic and severe disorder impairing ones way of thinking, emotions, and behavioral patterns.
Schizophrenia
Evidence of significant cognitive decline from a previous level of performance in one or more cognitive domains.
Major Neurocognitive Disorder
Dementia
This disorder can occur after a mild-moderate stressor or event with disruptive symptoms lasting up to 6 months after the stressful event.
This mood disorder includes 5 symptom criteria for a duration of 2 or more weeks, and causes a greater disturbance in functioning.
Major Depressive Disorder