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Suffer

A Wisdom Archive on Suffer

Suffer

A selection of articles related to Suffer

We recommend this article: Suffer - 1, and also this: Suffer - 2.
suffer, Suffer

ARTICLES RELATED TO Suffer

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Clinical depression - Types of depression

Clinical depression - Major Depression. Major Depression, or, more properly, 'Major Depressive Disorder' (MDD) is characterized by a severely depressed mood that persists for at least two weeks, and is generally recognized to contain an organic (chemical) component. Major Depressive Disorder is specified as either "a single episode" or "recurrent", as periods of depression may ...

See also:

Clinical depression, Clinical depression - Signs and symptoms, Clinical depression - Types of depression, Clinical depression - Major Depression, Clinical depression - Other Categories of Depression, Clinical depression - The role of anxiety in depression, Clinical depression - Anxiety, Clinical depression - Hypomania, Clinical depression - Causes of depression, Clinical depression - Treatment, Clinical depression - Medication, Clinical depression - Psychotherapy, Clinical depression - Transcranial magnetic stimulation, Clinical depression - Vagus nerve stimulation, Clinical depression - Electroconvulsive therapy, Clinical depression - Other methods of treatment, Clinical depression - Old methods, Clinical depression - Relapse, Clinical depression - Books, Clinical depression - Books by psychologists/psychiatrists, Clinical depression - Books by persons suffering or having suffered from depression, Clinical depression - Sources

Read more here: » Clinical depression: Encyclopedia II - Clinical depression - Types of depression

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Symptoms and prevalence

Modern research has revealed that OCD is much more common than previously thought. An estimated two to three percent of the population of the United States is thought to have OCD or display OCD-like symptoms. Because of the condition's personal nature, and the lingering stigma that surrounds it, there may be many unaccounted-for OCD sufferers, and the above percentages could be even higher. The typical OCD sufferer performs tasks (or compulsions) to seek relief from obsessions. To others, these tasks may appear simple and unnecessary. ...

See also:

Obsessive-compulsive disorder, Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Symptoms and prevalence, Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Causes and related disorders, Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Treatment, Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Neuropsychiatry, Obsessive-compulsive disorder - OCD in literature and film, Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Famous/celebrity OCD sufferers

Read more here: » Obsessive-compulsive disorder: Encyclopedia II - Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Symptoms and prevalence

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Crime and Punishment - Analysis

The behavior of Raskolnikov throughout the book can also be found in other works of Dostoevsky, such as Notes from Underground and The Brothers Karamazov, (his behavior is most similar to Ivan Karamazov from The Brothers Karamazov). He creates suffering for himself by killing the pawnbroker and living so destitutely despite his ability to get a good job. Razumikhin was in the same situation as Raskolnikov and lived to a large degree better, and when Razumikhin offered to get him a job, Raskolnikov refused; he led on the ...

See also:

Crime and Punishment, Crime and Punishment - Plot, Crime and Punishment - Analysis, Crime and Punishment - Themes, Crime and Punishment - Salvation through suffering, Crime and Punishment - Christian existentialism, Crime and Punishment - Characters, Crime and Punishment - Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov, Crime and Punishment - Sofya Semyonovna Marmeladova, Crime and Punishment - Other characters, Crime and Punishment - Structure, Crime and Punishment - Movie versions

Read more here: » Crime and Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Crime and Punishment - Analysis

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Erotomania - Erotomania in fiction

Author and Booker Prize winner Ian McEwan based the novel Enduring Love around the theme of a science writer who is harassed by an erotomanically deluded person. The book claims to be based on a real case report which is included in the appendix of the book, although this case report is, in reality, also fictional. In the book Diary of a Madman by Nikolai Gogol, the main character suffers from erotomania. Erotomania was the cause of Angélique's (Audrey Tautou) institutionalization in the 2002 film He Loves Me... He L ...

See also:

Erotomania, Erotomania - History, Erotomania - Contemporary syndrome, Erotomania - Erotomania in fiction

Read more here: » Erotomania: Encyclopedia II - Erotomania - Erotomania in fiction

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Clinical depression - Books

Clinical depression - Books by psychologists/psychiatrists. Beck, A. T., Rush, A. J., Shaw, B. F., Emery, G. (1987). Cognitive therapy of depression. New York: Guilford. Burns, David D. (1999). Feeling Good : The New Mood Therapy. Avon. Klein, D. F., & Wender, P. H. (1993). Understanding depression: A complete guide to its diagnosis and treatment. New York: Oxford University Press. Kramer, Peter D (2005). Against Depression. New York: Viking Ad ...

See also:

Clinical depression, Clinical depression - Signs and symptoms, Clinical depression - Types of depression, Clinical depression - Anxiety and Stress in Depression, Clinical depression - Mania and Hypomania in Depression, Clinical depression - Causes of depression, Clinical depression - Treatment, Clinical depression - Medication, Clinical depression - Psychotherapy, Clinical depression - Transcranial magnetic stimulation, Clinical depression - Vagus nerve stimulation, Clinical depression - Electroconvulsive therapy, Clinical depression - Other methods of treatment, Clinical depression - Old methods, Clinical depression - Relapse, Clinical depression - Books, Clinical depression - Books by psychologists/psychiatrists, Clinical depression - Books by persons suffering or having suffered from depression, Clinical depression - Sources

Read more here: » Clinical depression: Encyclopedia II - Clinical depression - Books

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Clinical depression - Books

Clinical depression - Books by psychologists/psychiatrists. Beck, A. T., Rush, A. J., Shaw, B. F., Emery, G. (1987). Cognitive therapy of depression. New York: Guilford. Burns, David D. (1999). Feeling Good : The New Mood Therapy. Avon. Klein, D. F., & Wender, P. H. (1993). Understanding depression: A complete guide to its diagnosis and treatment. New York: Oxford University Press. Kramer, Peter D (2005). Against Depression. New York: Viking Ad ...

See also:

Clinical depression, Clinical depression - Signs and symptoms, Clinical depression - Types of depression, Clinical depression - Major Depression, Clinical depression - Other Categories of Depression, Clinical depression - The role of anxiety in depression, Clinical depression - Anxiety, Clinical depression - Hypomania, Clinical depression - Causes of depression, Clinical depression - Treatment, Clinical depression - Medication, Clinical depression - Psychotherapy, Clinical depression - Transcranial magnetic stimulation, Clinical depression - Vagus nerve stimulation, Clinical depression - Electroconvulsive therapy, Clinical depression - Other methods of treatment, Clinical depression - Old methods, Clinical depression - Relapse, Clinical depression - Books, Clinical depression - Books by psychologists/psychiatrists, Clinical depression - Books by persons suffering or having suffered from depression, Clinical depression - Sources

Read more here: » Clinical depression: Encyclopedia II - Clinical depression - Books

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Erotomania - Contemporary syndrome

The core of the syndrome is that the affected person has a delusional belief that another person, usually of higher social status, is secretly in love with them. The sufferer may also believe that the subject of their delusion secretly communicates their love by subtle methods such as body posture, arrangement of household objects and other seemingly innocuous acts. The object of the delusion usually has little or no contact with the delusional person, who often believes t ...

See also:

Erotomania, Erotomania - History, Erotomania - Contemporary syndrome, Erotomania - Erotomania in fiction

Read more here: » Erotomania: Encyclopedia II - Erotomania - Contemporary syndrome

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Clinical depression - Signs and symptoms

According to the DSM-IV-TR criteria for diagnosing a major depressive disorder (see also: DSM cautionary statement) one of the following two required elements need to be present: Depressed mood, or Loss of interest or pleasure. It is sufficient to have either of these symptoms in conjunction with four of a list of other symptoms. These include: Feelings of overwhelming sadness or fear, or the seeming inability to feel emotion. A decrease in the amount of pleasure derived from what wer ...

See also:

Clinical depression, Clinical depression - Signs and symptoms, Clinical depression - Types of depression, Clinical depression - Major Depression, Clinical depression - Other Categories of Depression, Clinical depression - The role of anxiety in depression, Clinical depression - Anxiety, Clinical depression - Hypomania, Clinical depression - Causes of depression, Clinical depression - Treatment, Clinical depression - Medication, Clinical depression - Psychotherapy, Clinical depression - Transcranial magnetic stimulation, Clinical depression - Vagus nerve stimulation, Clinical depression - Electroconvulsive therapy, Clinical depression - Other methods of treatment, Clinical depression - Old methods, Clinical depression - Relapse, Clinical depression - Books, Clinical depression - Books by psychologists/psychiatrists, Clinical depression - Books by persons suffering or having suffered from depression, Clinical depression - Sources

Read more here: » Clinical depression: Encyclopedia II - Clinical depression - Signs and symptoms

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Clinical depression - Mania and Hypomania in Depression

The DSM-IV classifies depression and bipolar disorder as separate illnesses, but researchers such as Hagop Akiskal MD of the University of California, San Diego have found convincing evidence of hypomanic symptoms in depression. These symptoms, such as irritability, may not be sufficient in number to qualify as a hypomanic episode found in bipolar disorder, but may have a significant impact on the course of an individual’s depression. A study by Giovanni Cassano MD of the University of Pisa and his collaborators on the Spectrum Project found a correlation between lifetime hypomanic and manic sympt ...

See also:

Clinical depression, Clinical depression - Signs and symptoms, Clinical depression - Types of depression, Clinical depression - Anxiety and Stress in Depression, Clinical depression - Mania and Hypomania in Depression, Clinical depression - Causes of depression, Clinical depression - Treatment, Clinical depression - Medication, Clinical depression - Psychotherapy, Clinical depression - Transcranial magnetic stimulation, Clinical depression - Vagus nerve stimulation, Clinical depression - Electroconvulsive therapy, Clinical depression - Other methods of treatment, Clinical depression - Old methods, Clinical depression - Relapse, Clinical depression - Books, Clinical depression - Books by psychologists/psychiatrists, Clinical depression - Books by persons suffering or having suffered from depression, Clinical depression - Sources

Read more here: » Clinical depression: Encyclopedia II - Clinical depression - Mania and Hypomania in Depression

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Clinical depression - The role of anxiety in depression

Clinical depression - Anxiety. The different types of Depression and Anxiety are classified separately by the DSM-IV-TR, with the exception of hypomania, which is included under the Bipolar Disorder category. Despite the different categories, depression and anxiety can indeed be co-occurring (occurring together, independently, and without mood congruence), or co-morbid (occurring together, with overlapping symptoms, and with mood congruence). In an effort to bridge the gap between the DSM-IV-TR categories and wha ...

See also:

Clinical depression, Clinical depression - Signs and symptoms, Clinical depression - Types of depression, Clinical depression - Major Depression, Clinical depression - Other Categories of Depression, Clinical depression - The role of anxiety in depression, Clinical depression - Anxiety, Clinical depression - Hypomania, Clinical depression - Causes of depression, Clinical depression - Treatment, Clinical depression - Medication, Clinical depression - Psychotherapy, Clinical depression - Transcranial magnetic stimulation, Clinical depression - Vagus nerve stimulation, Clinical depression - Electroconvulsive therapy, Clinical depression - Other methods of treatment, Clinical depression - Old methods, Clinical depression - Relapse, Clinical depression - Books, Clinical depression - Books by psychologists/psychiatrists, Clinical depression - Books by persons suffering or having suffered from depression, Clinical depression - Sources

Read more here: » Clinical depression: Encyclopedia II - Clinical depression - The role of anxiety in depression

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Clinical depression - Treatment

Treatment of depression varies broadly, and is different for each individual. Various types and combinations of treatments may have to be tried. There are two primary modes of treatment, typically employed in conjunction with one another: medication and psychotherapy. A third treatment, electro-convulsive therapy (ECT) may be used where chemical treatment fails. Other alternative treatments used for depression include exercise and the use of v ...

See also:

Clinical depression, Clinical depression - Signs and symptoms, Clinical depression - Types of depression, Clinical depression - Major Depression, Clinical depression - Other Categories of Depression, Clinical depression - The role of anxiety in depression, Clinical depression - Anxiety, Clinical depression - Hypomania, Clinical depression - Causes of depression, Clinical depression - Treatment, Clinical depression - Medication, Clinical depression - Psychotherapy, Clinical depression - Transcranial magnetic stimulation, Clinical depression - Vagus nerve stimulation, Clinical depression - Electroconvulsive therapy, Clinical depression - Other methods of treatment, Clinical depression - Old methods, Clinical depression - Relapse, Clinical depression - Books, Clinical depression - Books by psychologists/psychiatrists, Clinical depression - Books by persons suffering or having suffered from depression, Clinical depression - Sources

Read more here: » Clinical depression: Encyclopedia II - Clinical depression - Treatment

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Symptoms and prevalence

Modern research has revealed that OCD is much more common than previously thought. An estimated two to three percent of the population of the United States is thought to have OCD or display OCD-like symptoms. Because of the condition's personal nature, and the lingering stigma that surrounds it, there may be many unaccounted-for OCD sufferers, and the actual percentages could be even higher. The typical OCD sufferer performs tasks (or compulsions) to seek relief from obsessions. To others, these tasks may appear simple and unnecessary ...

See also:

Obsessive-compulsive disorder, Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Symptoms and prevalence, Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Causes and related disorders, Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Treatment, Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Neuropsychiatry, Obsessive-compulsive disorder - OCD in literature and film, Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Famous/celebrity OCD sufferers, Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Refrences.

Read more here: » Obsessive-compulsive disorder: Encyclopedia II - Obsessive-compulsive disorder - Symptoms and prevalence

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Crime and Punishment - Structure

The novel is divided into six parts with an epilogue. Each part contains between five and eight chapters and the epilogue has two. The entire novel is written from a third person past tense omniscient perspective chiefly from Raskolnikov's point of view though it briefly switches to Dunya, Svidrigailov and Sonya during its course. In 1971, an unpublished scene written in first person perspective from Raskolinkov's point of view was released with Dostoevsky's annotated manuscript of the Russian Literary Monuments series. A translation of that scene ...

See also:

Crime and Punishment, Crime and Punishment - Plot, Crime and Punishment - Analysis, Crime and Punishment - Themes, Crime and Punishment - Salvation through suffering, Crime and Punishment - Christian existentialism, Crime and Punishment - Characters, Crime and Punishment - Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov, Crime and Punishment - Sofya Semyonovna Marmeladova, Crime and Punishment - Other characters, Crime and Punishment - Structure, Crime and Punishment - Movie versions

Read more here: » Crime and Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Crime and Punishment - Structure

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Crime and Punishment - Characters

Crime and Punishment - Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov. Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov, variously called Rodya and Rodka, is the protagonist from whose perspective the story is primarily told. The reader is told that he was a student, now fallen out, who is living in abject poverty in a top-floor flat in the slums of Saint Petersburg. Despite the name of the novel it does not deal with his crime and its formal punishment but with Raskolnikov's internal struggle and failing justification of his actions. The murder is ...

See also:

Crime and Punishment, Crime and Punishment - Plot, Crime and Punishment - Analysis, Crime and Punishment - Themes, Crime and Punishment - Salvation through suffering, Crime and Punishment - Christian existentialism, Crime and Punishment - Characters, Crime and Punishment - Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov, Crime and Punishment - Sofya Semyonovna Marmeladova, Crime and Punishment - Other characters, Crime and Punishment - Structure, Crime and Punishment - Movie versions

Read more here: » Crime and Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Crime and Punishment - Characters

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Crime and Punishment - Plot

The novel portrays the haphazardly planned murder of a miserly, aged pawnbroker and her younger sister by a destitute Saint Petersburg student named Raskolnikov, and the emotional, mental, and physical effects that follow. After falling ill with fever and lying bedridden for days, Raskolnikov is overcome with paranoia and begins to imagine that everyone he meets suspects him of the murder; the knowledge of his crime eventually drives him mad. Along the way, however, he meets the prostitute Sofya Semyonovna, with whom he falls in love. ...

See also:

Crime and Punishment, Crime and Punishment - Plot, Crime and Punishment - Analysis, Crime and Punishment - Themes, Crime and Punishment - Salvation through suffering, Crime and Punishment - Christian existentialism, Crime and Punishment - Characters, Crime and Punishment - Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov, Crime and Punishment - Sofya Semyonovna Marmeladova, Crime and Punishment - Other characters, Crime and Punishment - Structure, Crime and Punishment - Movie versions

Read more here: » Crime and Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Crime and Punishment - Plot

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Bedsore - Prevention

The condition is prevalent in sedentary individuals, such as those living with paralysis or confined to a bed because of illness or impairment. Nursing homes and hospitals usually set programs to avoid the development of bedsores in bedridden patients (e.g. moving them every two hours, ensuring dry sheets, etc.). Poor nutrition is also a major factor in the formation of pressure sores. ...

See also:

Bedsore, Bedsore - Classification, Bedsore - Pathophysiology, Bedsore - Epidemiology, Bedsore - Prevention, Bedsore - Complications, Bedsore - Famous sufferers

Read more here: » Bedsore: Encyclopedia II - Bedsore - Prevention

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Bedsore - Prevention

The condition is prevalent in sedentary individuals, such as those living with paralysis or confined to a bed because of illness or impairment. Nursing homes and hospitals usually set programs to avoid the development of bedsores in bedridden patients (e.g. moving them every two hours, using a standing frame to reduce pressure, ensuring dry sheets, etc.). Poor nutrition is also a major fact ...

See also:

Bedsore, Bedsore - Classification, Bedsore - Pathophysiology, Bedsore - Epidemiology, Bedsore - Prevention, Bedsore - Complications, Bedsore - Famous sufferers

Read more here: » Bedsore: Encyclopedia II - Bedsore - Prevention

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Bedsore - Classification

The ulcers are categorized into four stages, subject to size and depth: Stage I is the most superficial, with only superficial irritation, Stage II is blistering of the skin, Stage III involves the full thickness of the skin, and is often complicated by infection, Stage IV is the deepest, usually extending into the muscle, tendon or even bone. With higher stages, healing time is prolonged. While about 75% of stage 2 ulcers heal within 8 weeks, only 62% of stage 4 pressure ulcers ever heal, and only 52% h ...

See also:

Bedsore, Bedsore - Classification, Bedsore - Pathophysiology, Bedsore - Epidemiology, Bedsore - Prevention, Bedsore - Complications, Bedsore - Famous sufferers

Read more here: » Bedsore: Encyclopedia II - Bedsore - Classification

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Hydrocele testis - Symptoms

A hydrocele feels like a small fluid filled balloon inside the scrotum. It is smooth, and is mainly in front of one of the testes. Hydroceles vary greatly in size. Hydroceles are normally painless and harmless. Large hydroceles cause discomfort because of their size. As the fluid of a hydrocele is transparent, light shown through a hydrocelic region will be visible from the other side. Symptoms of a hydrocele can easily be distinguished from testicular cancer, as a hydrocele is soft and fluidy, where a testicular cancer feels hard and rough. Through diagnostic ultrasound the accum ...

See also:

Hydrocele testis, Hydrocele testis - Symptoms, Hydrocele testis - Treatment, Hydrocele testis - Fertility, Hydrocele testis - Historical Sufferers

Read more here: » Hydrocele testis: Encyclopedia II - Hydrocele testis - Symptoms

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - In vitro meat - Arguments in favor

In vitro meat - Reduced animal suffering. In vitro meat may appeal to animal welfare advocates and others concerned about animal well-being. Replacing traditional meat with in vitro meat has the potential to reduce overall animal suffering; however it does not eliminate it. See also: "Animals are still used" argument, below. In vitro meat - Health. In vitro meat may be cleaner and less prone to disease than animals, provided that donor cells are not contaminated. The in ...

See also:

In vitro meat, In vitro meat - Related, In vitro meat - Process and patent, In vitro meat - Arguments in favor, In vitro meat - Reduced animal suffering, In vitro meat - Health, In vitro meat - Environment, In vitro meat - Space food, In vitro meat - Arguments against, In vitro meat - Animals are still used, In vitro meat - Artificiality, In vitro meat - Quality safety and health, In vitro meat - Differences from traditionally produced meat, In vitro meat - Economic impact, In vitro meat - Research, In vitro meat - Fiction

Read more here: » In vitro meat: Encyclopedia II - In vitro meat - Arguments in favor

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - Mortification of the flesh - Forms

In its simplest form, it can mean merely denying oneself certain bodily pleasures, such as by abstaining from chocolate, from meat, from food generally (fasting), from alcohol, or from sex. It can also be practised by deliberately choosing a simple or even impoverished lifestyle; this is often one reason many monastics take vows of poverty. In some of its more severe forms, it can mean actually inflicting pain and physical harm to oneself, such as by beating, whipping, or other means. Some ps ...

See also:

Mortification of the flesh, Mortification of the flesh - Forms, Mortification of the flesh - Practices in Different Religions & Cultures, Mortification of the flesh - Jewish practices, Mortification of the flesh - Etymology and Christian roots, Mortification of the flesh - Examples of mortification of the flesh in Christian history, Mortification of the flesh - Modern Christian theology, Mortification of the flesh - Recent Church documents, Mortification of the flesh - Pain as means for a higher end, Mortification of the flesh - Pain is to be loved relative to the positive end, Mortification of the flesh - Pain as an integral part of human nature united to the Person of Christ, Mortification of the flesh - The teaching of Pope John Paul II: the salvific meaning of suffering, Mortification of the flesh - Need for suffering, Mortification of the flesh - Process of revealing the meaning of suffering, Mortification of the flesh - Joy in suffering: sharing in the redemption

Read more here: » Mortification of the flesh: Encyclopedia II - Mortification of the flesh - Forms

Suffer: Encyclopedia II - John Safran vs God - Episode guide

John Safran vs God - Episode One - Confession. In the UK, Safran succeeds in getting a fatwa placed on Rove McManus for dropping Safran's scheduled appearance on Rove Live (the fatwa was later removed) Safran tries out a religion based on Peyote; vomiting and weak hallucinations ensue Safran examines Scientology at the expense of Jamie Packer and the Nine network John Safran vs God - Episode Two - Suffering. Safran looks at the dupliciticy o ...

See also:

John Safran vs God, John Safran vs God - Episode guide, John Safran vs God - Episode One - Confession, John Safran vs God - Episode Two - Suffering, John Safran vs God - Episode Three -, John Safran vs God - Episode Four -, John Safran vs God - Episode Five - Masturbation, John Safran vs God - Episode Six -, John Safran vs God - Episode Seven -, John Safran vs God - Episode Eight - Exorcism

Read more here: » John Safran vs God: Encyclopedia II - John Safran vs God - Episode guide




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