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Mental health of primary health care physicians and nurses following prolonged infection control rules: a national survey in China. [PDF]
Li CJ+11 more
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Nocturnal hypoxia in patients with sleep disorders: exploring its role as a mediator between neurotic personality traits and psychological symptoms. [PDF]
Jiang F+5 more
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Psychometric Properties of the Greek Version of the BPDSI-IV: Insights into Borderline Personality Disorder Severity. [PDF]
Malogiannis I+7 more
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Body Image Concerns and Psychological Distress in Adults with Hearing Aids: A Case-Control Study. [PDF]
Apa E+7 more
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The Classification of Phobic Disorders
The International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine, 1983The history of classification of phobic disorders is reviewed. Problems in the ability of current classification schemes to predict, control and describe the relationship between the symptoms and other phenomena are outlined. A new classification of phobic disorders is proposed based on the presence or absence of an endogenous anxiety syndrome with ...
David V. Sheehan, Kathy Harnett Sheehan
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Behaviour Therapy and Phobic Disorders
British Journal of Psychiatry, 1963There are a number of established forms of treatment for neurotic symptoms. In some patients symptoms are relieved by drugs which control anxiety, in others by antidepressant drugs (Sargant and Dally, 1962), still others appear to respond to some form of individual or group psychotherapy.
M. G. Gelder, V. Meyer
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A rating scale for phobic disorders
Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 1983ABSTRACT– – Scales were constructed for the rating of phobic disorders, taking into account both behaviour therapeutic and psycho‐dynamic aspects. The scales rate phobic behaviour with regard to anxiety (situational and anticipatory) and coping (avoidance and escape).
J. E. Alström+2 more
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The Classification of Phobic Disorders
British Journal of Psychiatry, 1970History of term ‘phobia’The term ‘phobia’ derives from the Greek word ‘phobos’ meaning panic-fear and terror, and from the deity of the same name who provoked fear and panic in one's enemies. Although morbid fears have been described by doctors from Hippocrates onwards, the word phobia has only been used on its own since the beginning of the 19th ...
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Specificity in Familial Aggregation of Phobic Disorders
Archives of General Psychiatry, 1995To investigate whether each of three DSM-III-R phobic disorders (simple phobia, social phobia, and agoraphobia with panic attacks) is familial and "breeds true."Rates of each phobic disorder were contrasted in first-degree relatives of four proband groups: simple phobia, social phobia, agoraphobia with panic attacks, and not ill controls.
Donald F. Klein+4 more
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