Treatment Of Patients essay topics

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  • Sad Patients
    2,131 words
    Running Head: SYMPTOMS, CAUSES AND TREATMENTS Critical View of Seasonal Affective Disorder Ashley C. Kort Illinois CollegeAbstractThis paper is intended to be a critical view of Seasonal Affective Disorder. In order to understand fully the biological and psychological components of the disease, as well as its possible causes and treatments, it is necessary to compile and interpret previously conducted research. Such is the purpose of this paper. First, the symptoms of Seasonal Affective Disorder...
  • Impetigo Forms
    330 words
    I. Definition: Impetigo is a skin infection caused by bacteria. It is most common in children and is contagious. Impetigo forms round, crusted, oozing spots that grow larger day by day. The hands and face are the favorite locations for impetigo, but it often appears on other parts of the body. II. Causes: While the bacteria causing impetigo may have been caught from someone else with impetigo or boils, impetigo usually begins out of the blue without any apparent source of infection.. Treatment: ...
  • Joints In The Back Of The Spine
    1,699 words
    UNDER THE KNIFE OF SPONDYLOLISTHESIS Imagine you are sitting in a doctor's office waiting for a report on your condition. Your symptoms are pain that spreads across your lower back that doesn't go away, spasms that stiffen the back and tighten the hamstrings, and numbness in the lower extremities. Upon examination and after x-rays, the doctor sits down in the room and tells you of a condition you have called. Spondylolisthesis... ? What is that... ? Spondylolisthesis is the forward slippage of o...
  • Interest In Electro Sleep Therapy
    1,025 words
    The groundwork for the development of electroshock therapy was laid in 1935, when a Budapest psychiatrist, Von Me duna, observed that epilepsy was extremely uncommon among schizophrenics. He also noted that schizophrenic symptoms tended to disappear after seizures. Accordingly, he set out to find a way to induce epileptic-like convulsions to help schizophrenics. He first tried administering camphor and oil but this did not work out well because it was hard to predict when the convulsions would t...
  • Case Of Dr Quinn's Patient Diane
    968 words
    Diane: A Case of Physician Assisted Suicide Diane was a patient of Dr. Timothy Quill, who was diagnosed with acute leukemia. Diane overcame alcoholism and had vaginal cancer in her youth. She had been under his care for a period of 8 years, during which an intimate doctor-patient bond had been established. It was Dr. Quill's observation that "she was an incredibly clear, at times brutally honest, thinker and communicator". This observation became especially cogent after Diane heard of her diagno...
  • Homeopathy Practice Therapy Homeopathic Therapy
    2,358 words
    Homeopathic Survey of Alternative Medicine October 8, 2003 Homoeopathy is an alternative method of treatment, based on the nature's Law of Cure, or the saying 'Like Cures Like'. Discovered by a German scientist Dr. Samuel Hahnemann in 1796, and has been verified experimentally and clinically for 200 years. Homoeopathy is the revolutionary, natural medical science. Homoeopathy is gentle and effective system of medicine. The remedies are prepared from natural substances to precise standards and wo...
  • Patient Experiences The Analyst
    1,541 words
    Psychoanalysis had its beginning with the discovery that a person in complete physical health could experience an illness with physical symptoms that stemmed from things trapped in the subconscious known as hysteria. Charcot, a French neurologist tried to liberate the mind through hypnosis. A Viennese physician, Josef Breuer, carried this purging further with a process based on his patient, Anna O., revealing her thoughts and feelings to him. Sigmund Freud took Breuer's method and made generaliz...
  • Panic Disorder Patients Score
    983 words
    Clinical trials have demonstrated the efficacy of cognitive-behavioral treatment (CBT) for panic disorder but the mechanism responsible for the improvement are lacking. The reduction of fear of fear (FOF), or the tendency to respond fearfully to benign bodily sensations, is believed to underlie the improvement resulting from CBT. Research has provided evidence consistent with the FOF hypothesis. Descriptive studies consistently show that panic disorder patients score significantly higher on self...
  • Use Total Body Uv B Radiation Treatment
    1,258 words
    Psoriasis Treatment Psoriasis is an autoimmune disorder of the skin, which means that the body's defense system has turned on itself. This causes "angry red lesions to appear on the surface of the skin, multiply, and scale over with silvery patches" (1). Not only do they look hideous, but cause terrible itching and discomfort. "The word (psoriasis) comes from ancient Greece, and means 'to itch' " (1). This disease can be present from birth or not show up until a person is well into their adult y...
  • Cerebral Palsy Causes
    1,547 words
    Cerebral Palsy Cerebral palsy refers to a group of chronic disorders that involve degrees of brain damage that affect body control and movement. The term cerebral refers to the brain, while palsy describes a disorder that impairs the control of body movement. These disorders are not the result of muscles or nerves problems. Instead, they are due to impaired motor areas in the brain that disrupt its ability to control movement and posture. The condition typically appears within the first few year...
  • Patients And Doctors
    1,467 words
    My on-site experience with Dr. Cimmino was surprisingly brief, less than an hour and a half long, but in this short time, I was able to observe and absorb a great deal of information. This experience took place on the B 1 level of the University Hospital in the Cancer Center. Even though I was unable to shadow Dr. Cimmino, an oncology surgeon, during his rounds, I was able to sit in on a multidisciplinary clinic that consisted of a diverse gathering of doctors, nurses, and social workers. After ...
  • Proper Treatment
    546 words
    From Depression to Schizophrenia Some of the behaviors currently accepted in modern society were considered Evil or possession in the 19th century. There are other behaviors that are still considered wrong even by today's standards. This story is a perfect example of the progression of a treatable condition, Depression, to a harder and almost impossible condition, Schizophrenia. If this story hadn't taken place in the year 1891, the reader would think; "Why didn't they use proper treatment?" . S...
  • Multiple Personality Disorder
    1,218 words
    Multiple Personality Disorder, MPD, is an illness that is little understood by the public but still remains to be very difficult and trying to the people that fall at its mercy everyday. In the 1950's, a book introducing the World to Multiple Personality Disorder was released, The Three Faces of Eve. This was the first time the public had ever been exposed to this sickness (Clark 15). People with this disorder are said to be inhabited by many different personalities. Each of these personalities ...
  • Evidence Of Old Fractures And Bone Deformities
    2,763 words
    Osteogenisis imperfecta (OI) Disorders DEFINITION Osteogenisis imperfecta (OI) is? a rare genetic disorder of collagen synthesis associated with broad spectrum of musculoskeletal problems, most notably bowing and fractures of the extremities, muscle weakness, ligamentous laxity, and spinal deformities.? (Binder, 386). Other collagen-containing extra skeletal tissues, such as the sclerae, the teeth, and the heart valves are also affected to a variable degree. OI has a? common feature of bony frag...

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