Archive for the 'Child Psychology' Category
People tend to assume that children are carefree and living in the best times of their lives. They have no worries, no reason to fret, nothing to be concerned about other than where to hang out after school. Unfortunately, this is not always the case in today’s modern world and cases of anxiety disorder in children are on the rise.
Are you feeling anxious? For some people, controlling anxiety is a daily necessity. Stressful situations cause the heart to pound, the palms to sweat, and breathing to become more intense. They begin to feel panicky and scared. It can easily consume your days and years without even a hesitation. Anxiety can harm a person not only emotionally, but physically. Most people believe that the only cure for controlling anxiety is medication. That thought is absolutely not true and could save people quite a bit of grief.
Ever seen a healthy child who doesn’t respond when talked to? One of the tell-tale signs of autism is the person’s isolation from other people. The word “autistic” comes from the word “autos” meaning “self.” Autistic people do not respond to others and they often appear to be deaf because they do not respond appropriately to sounds. Brain researchers have discovered that the autistic person’s lack of a response may be due to white noise.
The world we inhabit can often be a little overwhelming. While many of us push on and leave our daily dilemmas behind, some of us have trouble moving forward. In fact, a number of individuals find life to be rather challenging and burdensome at times. If you dread each day like it is another huge obstacle, or you simply prefer to stay in bed and not face the world, you may be suffering from symptoms of depression. This common affliction hinders many normal, everyday people from getting along with their routine lives. Fortunately you don’t have to grapple this problem on your own.
Reading the latest ADHD article, I was surprised on how far treatment of attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder has come since I was a kid. You see, I had childhood ADHD, and I can tell you first hand that, back then, there was only one option for treatment. That was to medicate. Oh sure, sometimes there was counseling used for ADD, but every ADHD article that I read at the time said that the only solution was to medicate. Fortunately, it is not that way anymore, according to every article on ADHD I’ve read recently.
Do You have a child with ADHD? Any parent who has a child with attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder knows that finding ADHD treatments is crucial to the child’ and the family’s well-being. There are a couple of approaches families choose to take to deal with the disorder. After seeking advice from a doctor, parents can decide what approach will work best for their situation.
What does it means when your loved one is diagnosis with general anxiety disorder? The symptoms of a general anxiety disorder are insufferable—for both the one experiencing the general anxiety disorder and those associating with the one experiencing it.
General Anxiety Disorder, impacting approximately 500,000 people in the U. S. alone, is also called Generalized Anxiety Disorder, and consists of the following symptoms, which I will include in a scenario:
The first thing I think of when I hear the phrase borderline personality disorder treatment is how after my friend had been, finally, diagnosed with BPD or bi-polar disorder, she had to take a daily handful of pills. This was to me excessive, especially compared to my one pill a day for a similar but different disorder—similar in that it manifested in the mental realms and different because it was less about anger than it was or is about order.
Do you know of any autistic child? Parents who have a child diagnosed within the autism spectrum of disorders are hard pressed to find treatments for autism that actually work. There are a number of different approaches but only a few have proved to be effective in the successful treatments for autism and related pervasive developmental disorders. Two successful approaches are Applied Behavioral Analysis and sensory integration.
According to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in 166 children is diagnosed as being autistic. That is a surprisingly high rate for most of us who haven’t been exposed to the statistics or someone affected by the condition. Autism research is in trouble because of this. The lack of public information means that research funds are diverted to other more prominent causes such as heart disease and cancer. Although these are important as well, there are so many affected by autism that it is also a worthwhile cause.