Mental Health Conditions

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Anxiety is often described as persistent and intense worrying and fear over everyday situations.

Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder is often characterized by hyperactivity, difficulty paying attention, and impulsivity.

Bipolar Disorder can cause people to experience large mood swings and is often characterized by mania and depression.

Borderline Personality Disorder is characterized by instability in personal relationships, risk-taking behavior, and fear of abandonment.

Depression is characterized by feelings of sadness and hopelessness and a loss of interest in pleasurable activities that last for more than two weeks.

Dissociative disorders, frequently associated with trauma, disrupt every area of psychological functioning: consciousness, memory, identity, emotion, motor control, and behavior.

Eating disorders are characterized by intentionally changing food consumption to the point where physical health or social behaviors are affected.

Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is characterized by repetitive, unwanted, intrusive thoughts (obsessions) and irrational, excessive urges to do certain actions (compulsions).

PTSD involves a set of physiological and psychological responses. It can occur in people who have experienced or witnessed a traumatic event.

Psychosis is characterized as disruptions to a person’s thoughts and perceptions that make it challenging to recognize what is real and what is not.

Schizoaffective disorder is a mental health disorder marked by a combination of schizophrenia symptoms, such as hallucinations or delusions, and mood disorder symptoms, such as depression or mania.

Schizophrenia is a thought disorder with symptoms of delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech, trouble with thinking, and lack of motivation being common.