Determining Mental Status: The "physical Examination" of Psychiatry |
Contents
Chapter OneOn Determining Mental Status | 3 |
Chapter TwoThe Mental Status Protocol | 15 |
Useful procedures for evaluating memory | 32 |
Copyright | |
24 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
activity affect anger anxiety anxious appearance associated attack attention avoid become behavior believe better body borderline cause changes characteristic commonly complex compulsive consequence conversion create defense deficit delusions depressed patient diagnosis dissociative doctor emotional equivalent event example excessively experience express fact fantasy fear feel fugue give hypochondriacal hysterical idea identify identity illness important insight intense judgment less live look manic matter meaning memory merely mind mood normal obsessional obsessive obsessive-compulsive occur organic orientation original pain paranoid perhaps personality disorder phobic physical possible prefer present primary problem produce psychopathic question rarely reality reason relationship remember response result schizophrenic secondary seems sense severe sexual simple somatization sometimes specific speech success suffer suggest symbolic symptoms syndrome tell things thinking thought traumatic trivial true turn typical wish worry York