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.CBT 191 2, 238consistent evidence 198 phenelzine 42, 118 19, 125, 129, 170, 192costs 346 phenomenology of social phobia 148 9diagnosis 7 phenotype genotype relationships inHarvard/Brown Anxiety Research panic disorder and phobias 84Program 243 phobiahealth service use 345 areas still open to research 30in primary care 334 characterization 245incomplete evidence 199 clinical picture 246 7pharmacotherapy 128, 345 clinical significance of 108psychotherapeutic interventions consequences of untreated 349 50179 80, 183 6 consistent evidence 30treatment effectiveness studies 229 cues 4 INDEX ______________________________________________________________________________________________ 363definitions 246 panic disorder in 334differential diagnosis 246 7 phobias in 342 4examples 4 vs.secondary care 92external or internal cues 10 principal complaint technique 71facts or fiction 110 12 proportional impairment ratio (PIR)handy or handicapping conditions 173 491 4 propranolol 127history of concept 1 2 prototypical mental disorders 60incomplete evidence 30 psychiatric disorder, fear of 90neglected or minor disorders 52 4 psychiatric epidemiology 85 8occurrence 4 psychiatric nosology 330persistence over years 9 10 psychoanalytic treatment of phobicpresence of non-phobic (uncued) disorders 144symptoms 10 11 psychobiology of phobias 146 8prevalence of 303, 338 9 psychodynamic approaches to phobicreflections on definitions 108 10 disorders 238specific or multiple cues 7 10 psychodynamic group therapy 243stigma associated with 352 psychodynamic therapy, anxietysubjective experience of the cue 5 7 disorders 238subtypes 37 psychoeducation 124unanswered questions 352 3 psychological reliance 161underrecognition 350 1 psychological treatmentuse of term 43 in agoraphobia 228 9vs.fears 246 in children 290 1phobia-like syndromes 15 in phobias 228 32phobic clusters 8 9 in social phobia 229 30phobic disorders in specific phobias 230 1psychoanalytic treatment of 144 psychopharmacology treatment ofrange of treatment approaches 153 phobias and avoidance reactionsphobic syndromes 15 29 160 2physical illness, comorbidity with 338 psychosocial interventionsphysician education, need of 333 4 in adolescence 257 69physiological dependency 161 in childhood 257 69, 273, 281 2physiological symptoms 117 psychotherapeutic interventionspindolol 128 agoraphobia 179 80Plan Do Study Act (PDSA) method diagnostic issues in 238353 in Latin America 242 4post-traumatic stress disorder 19, 23, 25, panic disorder 179 80, 183 628 9, 57, 70 1, 168, 242, 351 psychoanalytic-attachmentdifferential diagnosis 29 perspective 237 41onset and discourse 28 review 179 210potential cognitive impairment 125 social phobia 187 93preferential processing of social-threat- specific phobia 193 8related words 56 psychotherapy 34, 176pregabalin 127, 132, 144 and pharmacotherapy 216Present State Examination 110 public health perspective, treatment ofprevalence of phobias 63 7, 76 7, 303, phobic disorders 235 7338 9 public policy 112primary carecollaborative care intervention in 334 quality of life 172 3, 314 20depression in 342 and comorbidity 348 364 ______________________________________________________________________________________________ INDEXquality of life (cont.) service utilization 71 3burden of phobias on 329 sex preponderance 65domains that need to be assessed 321 sexual dysfunciton 162dysfunction 330 sexual functioning in social phobias 317generic measures 315 sexual theories 33measures 330 Short Form-12 (SF-12) 71rating scales measuring 315 shyness 22, 51, 152 3specific phobias 349 vs.sociability 254, 296see also health-related quality of life shyness clinics 153questionnaire vs [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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