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Mental Health and Health Disorder Information - Articles,
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Mental Illusions:
Mental health has many
illusions that it is why it is often difficult to sort through the
rumble. In mental health, we have to deal with bipolar on many levels,
panic disorders, depression, trauma, and other more difficult diagnosis
and symptoms. It is often difficult since when we look at the various
mental illnesses we also have to look closer at the underlying elements
of the diagnosis. Underlying elements such as childhood trauma plays
a large role in many diagnoses today. We also have to consider the
many elements that are linked to mental health, including influences
of the past and influences in the current times, including history,
law, religion, and so on. All diagnoses regardless of the similarities
are treated differently, since we are all different.
Delusional disorders
for example, require careful attention since the symptoms include
separate elements and since it has a couple of different levels of
complexity. For example the ‘persecutory types’ endure
suspicious behaviors, which include believing that someone is out
to get them, feeling of cheated in life, feel they are mistreated
and will often include the law and justice system in their delusional
behaviors.
Delusional disorders
are difficult simply because the patient is often schizophrenic acting
yet distinct of the characteristics and symptoms that schizophrenias
illustrate. Some patients with delusional disorders have a grandiose
personality, believing they are better than anyone else is in the
world. The patient may attempt to convince another individual that
he or she was cheated, mistreated, robbed, and may believe he or she
has power that no one else has. Since minimal research results have
been provided on this diagnose it is even more difficult to understand.
Most delusional disorders are categorized by schizophrenia; however,
it is rarely diagnosed as schizophrenia.
We could also conduct
an overview of cognitive disorders and see that although they appear
simple in form, they are complicated. Delirium for example has symptoms
including, lack of awareness, short tension spans, wandering communication,
rambled speech, and so forth. The patient often skips in and out of
reality. To determine if the diagnose is delirium a counselor must
rule out other possibilities including, psychotic, dementia, schizophrenia,
and other related diagnoses. Other diagnoses such as histrionic personality
disorders are even more difficult to deal with. Although the person
rarely suffers hallucination, they are often illusion in their way
of thinking. The person often believes illustrates superficial characteristics
in emotions, and will become aggressive even violent if they are not
the center of focus.
In other words if you
are not paying thorough attention to a histrionic you had better watch
your back. Often histrionic types play a role acting out a personality
that does not exist, and will shift moods often. If you see a person
laughing and carrying on one minute, and then turns violent, you might
be dealing with a histrionic personality type. Histrionic types are
never the culprit they are often the victim according to their state
of mind. As you can see you are dealing with a very twisted mind here,
and to take the person lightly is asking for nothing but trouble.
Histrionic personality types play many games, but when you are the
game player, there are potential dangers involved. Histrionic types
will go at great lengths to prove everyone wrong.
Often these types of
individuals lack the ability to show emotions at a normal state. We
can also peek at the narcissistic personality disorders. These people
are similar in contrast to the histrionic in the sense they too are
grandiose. They illustrate behaviors that include self-promoting,
and often lack the ability to regard others. Often this type is demanding,
and often has difficulty in relationships, since every one is the
bad guy. Looking at both histrionic and narcissistic personalities,
we can see the similarities, which make it difficult for anyone that
is evaluating the patient.
The professional evaluating
the patient must also rule out other diagnoses including, Borderline
Personality Disorder (BPD), Histrionic Personality Disorder, as well
as other underlying disorders. The many mental illnesses that we face
every day are often difficult and when new studies find more information
on the illnesses it becomes even more difficult to understand. Who
really are the mentally impaired?
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