Uncontrollable thoughts about the event, extreme anxiety, nightmares?
PTSD
How many people will experience psychosis in their lives? (Percentage)
3%
Most common form of therapy for all mental illnesses?
(Hint: Mr. Marcon has talked about this in class)
CBT
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy
Three signs and symptoms of psychosis?
Trouble with concentration, Lack of self-care and hygiene, Spending more time alone rather than with others, Stronger and drastic mood swings, Or on the other hand, no emotion at all, Hallucination, Hear, see, taste things others do not, Hanging on to intrusive thoughts and Delusions.
Intrusive, and obsessive thoughts that consume your brain can be diagnosed as what?
OCD
From Sofia + Avery's presentation...
How many people suffer from bi-polar? (Percentage)
3%
Another form of therapy for Psychosis?
CSC
Coordinated Speciality Care
Two of the four causes of Psychosis?
Genetics, drugs, trauma, injuries / illness.
An illness everyone experiences...
General Anxiety Disorder
On Violet's presentation yesterday...
In percentage how many people experience depersonalization disorder in their lives?
75%.
If sent to the hospital for severe cases, what two most common kinds of tests would they do?
MRI scan, and EEG.
Anti-psychotic drugs come in two kinds of forms, what are they?
Gypsy Rose's mother, Dee Dee suffered from what mental illness?
Munchausen syndrome by proxy.
How many people experience anxiety in their lives??
100%, everyone.
If sent to a hospital, psychiatric ward how many days minimum do you spend there?
3 days (72 hours).
Most people experience symptoms of psychosis between the ages of what?
15-30.
Things or people around you feel unreal, can be a symptom of what mental illness?
Derealization.
Most common mental illness that stems from others, Depression, how many people suffer from it worldwide?
(Percentage)
3.8-4%
When on a medication treatment for psychosis, what do doctors recommend you do to not make symptoms worse?
Limit caffeine.
Based on some of the symptoms of psychosis, what can it be mistaken for?
(Two kinds of mental illnesses)
OCD or ADHD.