Physical Illness Essays

  • Are You Sick, or Do You Just Want Attention?

    867 Words  | 2 Pages

    behavior known as Munchausen syndrome. What, technically, is Munchausen syndrome? According to the Merck Manual, it is "Repeated fabrication of physical illness - usually acute, dramatic, and convincing - by a person who wanders from hospital to hospital for treatment." (1) People suffering from this disorder will even go so far as to inflict physical harm upon themselves in order to get the attention they want. Generally, it is associated with a past history of severe neglect and abuse inflicted

  • A Relationship Between Stress and Physical Illness

    1077 Words  | 3 Pages

    A Relationship Between Stress and Physical Illness Stress is an example of a behaviour and experience explained in physiological and psychological terms. Recently awareness has been heightened concerning the harmful effects of stress and how it can be successfully managed and prevented. Lay definitions of stress seem to focus on a 'force' or some kind of mental pressure which is exerted upon an individual which is aversive. Stress is often associated with anxiety, strain, tension, distress

  • Childhood Depression

    761 Words  | 2 Pages

    people are not aware that not only is depression diagnosed in adults, recently studies show that depression is diagnosed in adolescents. Not only adults become depressed. Children and teenagers also may have depression. Depression is defined as an illness when it persists. Childhood depression is one of the most overlooked disorders. Depression probably exists in about 5 percent of children in the general population. Children under stress, who experience loss, or who have, learning or conduct disorders

  • The Evolution of Euthanasia and Physician-Assisted Suicide

    2531 Words  | 6 Pages

    that the Netherlands' practice of euthanasia has become so liberalized that it is no longer recognizable as the same program that was originally legislated. Euthanasia in the Netherlands has gone from requiring terminal illness to no physical illness at all, from physical suffering to depression only, from conscious patients to unconscious, from those who can consent to those who cannot, and from being a measure of last resort to one of early intervention. Although respect for patient autonomy

  • The Debate on Whether Alcoholism is a Disease or Not

    1427 Words  | 3 Pages

    disordered state or condition. Alcoholism causes illness and disorder. Someone who is an alcoholic has a dependency on the drug alcohol. If you are dependent on alcohol, you can acquire many illnesses both physical and mental. Physical illness from alcoholism can include stomach problems, digestive problems, headaches, kidney problems, liver disease, problems with nervous system and trouble with immune system, just to name a few. Mental illness can include depression, anger, irritability, lack

  • Solutions To Homelessness

    1837 Words  | 4 Pages

    Researcher, Mary Beth Shinn, states, ?homelessness is first and foremost a housing problem not a psychological one? (qtd. in Franklin 15.) Nearly all the families in their study became stably housed regardless of substance abuse, mental illness, physical illness or incarceration. This study indicates that homelessness is not a permanent condition. People do get themselves out of the problem when an intervention occurs to provide them with access to the housing market (NYU 2.) Without permanent housing

  • The Demise of Dick and Nicole in Tender is the Night

    980 Words  | 2 Pages

    to him and that the thought "that she should die, sink into mental darkness, love another man, made him physically sick"(217). Not only is this excellent foreshadowing on Fitzgerald's part, but it gives us a measure just how dependent Dick is. Physical illness is uncontrollable. If even the thought makes causes him to have psychosomatic symptoms, it is imaginable what the actuality would bring. Dick needs Nicole badly, more so than ever at this point. Nicole on the other hand begins to become

  • Depression and Finding Help

    1336 Words  | 3 Pages

    Depression and Finding Help Depression is defined as an illness; the feelings of depression persist and interfere with a child or adolescent’s ability to function. Depression can be a very difficult and painful experience that affects not only the individual suffering from it, but also the people around them. There comes a point in some peoples’ lives where social isolation, low energy, sadness, low self-esteem, and the feeling of hopelessness, cannot be taken anymore. The feelings are so strong

  • P.K. Dick’s The Minority Report and Steven Spielberg’s The Minority Report

    1003 Words  | 3 Pages

    P.K. Dick’s The Minority Report and Steven Spielberg’s The Minority Report Death can occur in four ways. A person can die from a physical illness, viruses and infections. A person can die from an accident. A person can commit suicide. Finally a person can be murdered by another person. What if murders could be prevented? In P.K. Dick’s story The Minority Report, and in Spielberg’s film The Minority Report, the future can be altered by using incredible technology. The success of Spielberg’s

  • Panic Disorder

    732 Words  | 2 Pages

    disorder 2.     Symptoms 3.     Causes and risk factors 4.     Treatments II. Body A.     Facts about panic disorder 1.     Mimics some medical conditions causing years of misdiagnosis. Almost everyone who panics believes they have a serious physical illness and goes to 10 or more doctors until they are finally diagnosed. 2.     7.2% of all adults or 1 in 15 have panic disorder. 3.     1/3 of all Americans have at least one panic attack, ¾ being women. 4.     It’s the most common emotional disorder

  • kids in the butt

    1808 Words  | 4 Pages

    through the stresses of the day (cigarettes), and relax in the evening (alcohol). The Marlboro Man and the Virginia Slims woman are widely seen models, and licit drugs are pushed to remedy all of the ills one may face–stress, headaches, depression, physical illness, and so on. Children face a monumental task of sorting out the many images and messages regarding both licit and illicit drugs. Adolescents are quite adept at spotting hypocrisy and may have difficulty understanding a policy of "saying no to

  • Catcher in the Rye Essay: Holden Caulfield - A Nice Kid in a Cruel World

    1767 Words  | 4 Pages

    overwhelmed should not be surprising" (71). Holden is also labeled as curious and compassionate, a true moral idealist whose attitude comes from an intense hatred of hypocrisy. The novel opens in a doctor's office, where Holden is recuperating from physical illness and a mental breakdown. In Holden's fight with Stradlater, his roommate, he reveals his moral ideals: he fears his roommate's sexual motives, and he values children for their sincerity and innocence, seeking to protect them from the phony adult

  • Depression And Depression In Canada

    554 Words  | 2 Pages

         There are many sufferers of this illness; at any one time, 5% of Canadians are depressed, and 10-20% will suffer from it at one point in their lives.      But family and friends who've never experienced true depression can have trouble understanding what it's like. Many people find it difficult to think of depression as an illness because their

  • Charlie as the Victim of Circumstance in F. Scott Fitzgerald's Babylon Revisited

    573 Words  | 2 Pages

    financial situation, as evidenced by Lincoln's comment to Charlie over lunch: "I think Marion felt there was some kind of injustice to it-you not even working toward the end, and getting richer and richer." (p. 15) Her hatred is also fueled by her physical illness and her unfounded belief that Helen's marriage to Charlie was not happy. When Charlie locked Helen out during a snowstorm and Helen later became ill from exposure, Marion felt ...

  • Depression

    968 Words  | 2 Pages

    sense of physical well being. We have all felt sad at one time or another, but that is not depression. Sometimes we feel tired from working hard, or discouraged when faced with serious problems. This too, is not depression. These feelings usually pass within a few days or weeks, once we adjust to the stress. Cause of depression: Clinical depression is a very common psychological problem, and most people never seek proper treatment, or seek treatment but they are misdiagnosed with physical illness

  • Health Psychology Case Study

    1142 Words  | 3 Pages

    Psychology of health and illness searches how a number of psychological factors impact upon health and illness and emphasizes four perspectives which are; bio psychosocial, health and illness as being on a continuum, the direct and indirect pathways between psychology and health and the focus on variability. This essay seeks to examine the psychological constructs at the various stages of health, the interconnection between psychology and health. INTRODUCTION Human behaviour plays a significant

  • Physical Mental Health, A Social Determinants Of Health

    1615 Words  | 4 Pages

    determinant of health as it affects people from birth to older age. Throughout this essay the physical mental health needs of individuals, families and communities will be shown and how housing may affect this. Bonnefoy et al (2004) said that housing affects health in many ways which he split down into main factors, housing standards, social environment and housing

  • Persuasive Essay On Mental Health

    1102 Words  | 3 Pages

    those with physical problems with more care than those with mental problems. Prescription drugs can only do so much helping the mentally ill go through their daily lives and more should be done to help those who need more than medicine to cope with their illness. Mental health should be considered just as important as physical health because of how advanced physical healing is, how the public reacts to those with mental illness, and due to the consequences that could happen if the illness is not correctly

  • Fatma Case Study

    871 Words  | 2 Pages

    that developed hypertension. Using the Psychology of Health and Illness as the main point, comparing the biomedical model and health psychology. Even though according to Ogden (ano) a biomedical model regards, Fatima illness is beyond her control and she is only a victim of some external force that invades the body and caused physical change or is originated as an internal physical change. (Ogden, ano, p.5). Fatima health and illness is a psychological construction of her habits and behaviors also

  • Asian American Culture

    720 Words  | 2 Pages

    How are people in your culture viewed or treated when they have a mental illness? Anxiety and depression are just one of many different mental illnesses. This type of illness is not typically discussed among the Korean culture and is often frowned upon. In fact, only 12% of Asian Americans will tell a friend or family member, because having a mental illness brings along feelings of denial and shame. Most individuals do not seek help of a professional until after they are no longer able to hide their