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Welcome to Psychology Heal

Some part of diagnostic areas, you might be interested to read: 

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Depression
A negative affective state, ranging from unhappiness and discontent to an extreme feeling of sadness, pessimism, and despondency, that interferes with daily life. Various physical, cognitive, and social changes also tend to co-occur, including altered eating or sleeping habits, lack of energy or motivation, difficulty concentrating or making decisions, and withdrawal from social activities. It is symptomatic of a number of mental health disorders.
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Phobia
A persistent and irrational fear of a specific situation, object, or activity (e.g., heights, dogs, water, blood, driving, flying), which is consequently either strenuously avoided or endured with marked distress. 
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Intelligence
The ability to derive information, learn from experience, adapt to the environment, understand, and correctly utilize thought and reason.
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Stress
The physiological or psychological response to internal or external stressors. Stress involves changes affecting nearly every system of the body, influencing how people feel and behave. For example, it may be manifested by palpitations, sweating, dry mouth, shortness of breath, fidgeting, accelerated speech, augmentation of negative emotions.
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Bipolar Disorder (I,II)
Any of a group of mood disorders in which symptoms of mania and depression alternate, the group includes primarily the following subtypes: bipolar I disorder, in which the individual fluctuates between episodes of mania and major depressive episodes or experiences a mix of these. Bipolar II disorder, in which the individual fluctuates between major depressive and hypomanic episodes. The former official name for bipolar disorders, manic-depressive illness, is still in frequent use.
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Delusional disorder
Any one of a group of psychotic disorders with the essential feature of one or more nonbizarre delusions that persist for at least 1 month but are not due to schizophrenia. The delusions are nonbizarre in that they feature situations that could conceivably occur in real life (e.g., being followed, poisoned, infected, deceived by one’s government).
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Anxiety
Anxiety is considered a future-oriented, long-acting response broadly focused on a diffuse threat, whereas fear is an appropriate, present-oriented, and short-lived response to a clearly identifiable and specific threat.
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Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)

Any one of a group of disorders with an onset typically occurring during the preschool years and characterized by varying but often marked difficulties in communication and social interaction. 
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Aggression

Behavior aimed at harming others physically or psychologically. It can be distinguished from anger in that anger is oriented at overcoming the target but not necessarily through harm or destruction.

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Narcissistic personality disorder

ََA personality disorder with the following characteristics: (a) a long-standing pattern of grandiose self-importance and an exaggerated sense of talent and achievements; (b) fantasies of unlimited sex, power, brilliance, or beauty; (c) an exhibitionistic need for attention and admiration; (d) either cool indifference or feelings of rage, humiliation, or emptiness as a response to criticism, indifference, or defeat; and (e) various interpersonal disturbances, such as feeling entitled to special favors, taking advantage of others, and inability to empathize with the feelings of others.

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Sexual Disorders

Any impairment of sexual function or behavior. Sexual disorders include sexual dysfunction and paraphilic disorders.

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Schizophrenia 

A psychotic disorder characterized by disturbances in thinking (cognition), emotional responsiveness, and behavior, with an age of onset typically between the late teens and mid-30s. Schizophrenia was first formally described in the late 19th century by Emil Kraepelin,

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Hallucination

False sensory perception that has a compelling sense of reality despite the absence of an external stimulus. It may affect any of the senses, but auditory hallucinations and visual hallucinations are most common. Hallucinations are typically a symptom of a psychotic disorder, particularly schizophrenia, but also may result from substance use, neurological abnormalities, and other conditions.

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Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder OCD

A disorder characterized by recurrent intrusive thoughts (obsessions) that prompt the performance of neutralizing rituals (compulsions). 

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Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder

(ADHD)

A behavioral syndrome characterized by the persistent presence of symptoms involving (a) inattention or (b) impulsivity or hyperactivity. The symptoms, which impair social, academic, or occupational functioning, start to appear before the age of 7 and are observed in more than one setting.

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Sleep Disorders

A persistent disturbance of typical sleep patterns (including the amount, quality, and timing of sleep) or the chronic occurrence of abnormal events or behavior during sleep.

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Immigration and Culture Shock

Loneliness, anxiety, and confusion experienced by an individual or group that has been suddenly thrust into an alien culture or otherwise encounters radical cultural change.

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Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

A disorder that may result when an individual lives through or witnesses an event in which he or she believes that there is a threat to life or physical integrity and safety and experiences fear, terror, or helplessness.

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Antisocial personality disorder

The presence of a chronic and pervasive disposition to disregard and violate the rights of others. Manifestations include repeated violations of the law, exploitation of others, deceitfulness, impulsivity, aggressiveness, reckless disregard for the safety of self and others, and irresponsibility, accompanied by lack of guilt, remorse, and empathy. 

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Addiction
A state of psychological or physical dependence (or both) on the use of alcohol or other drugs. The term is often used as an equivalent term for substance dependence and sometimes applied to behavioral disorders, such as sexual, Internet, and gambling addictions.
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Relationships
A continuing and often committed association between two or more people, as in a family, friendship, marriage, partnership, or other interpersonal link in which the participants have some degree of influence on each other’s thoughts, feelings, and actions.
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Divorce
The legal dissolution of marriage, leaving the partners free to remarry. Divorce may significantly influence well-being, with many individuals experiencing depression, loneliness and isolation, self-esteem difficulties, or other psychological distress.
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Personality Disorders
Any in a group of disorders involving pervasive patterns of perceiving, relating to, and thinking about the environment and the self that interfere with long-term functioning of the individual and are not limited to isolated episodes. Cluster A includes paranoid, schizoid, and schizotypal; Cluster B includes antisocial, borderline, histrionic, and narcissistic; and Cluster C includes avoidant, dependent, and obsessive-compulsive; each disorder has its own criteria.
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Self-Confidence
and 
Self-Esteem
Self-assurance: trust in one’s abilities, capacities, and judgment. Because it is typically viewed as a positive attitude,a belief that one is capable of successfully meeting the demands of a task.
Self-esteem: the degree to which the qualities and characteristics contained in one’s self-concept are perceived to be positive. 
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Body dysmorphic disorder (BDD)

A disorder characterized by excessive preoccupation with an imagined defect in physical appearance or markedly excessive concern with a slight physical anomaly. The preoccupation is typically accompanied by frequent checking of the defect, it shares features with obsessive-compulsive disorder, such as obsessions with appearance and associated compulsions (e.g., mirror-checking),

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Our Practice Areas

Cognitive-Behavior Therapy (CBT)

CBT assumes that cognitive, emotional, and behavioral variables are functionally interrelated. Treatment is aimed at identifying and modifying the client’s maladaptive thought processes and problematic behaviors through cognitive restructuring and behavioral techniques to achieve change.

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Hypnotherapy
 Hypnotherapy may use one or a combination of techniques, typically involving the administration by a properly trained professional of therapeutic suggestions to patients or clients.
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Family Therapy
A form of psychotherapy that focuses on the improvement of interfamilial relationships and behavioral patterns of the family unit as a whole, as well as among individual members and groupings, or subsystems, within the family. 
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Psychological Tools
 and 
 assessment instrument
Any test, interview, questionnaire, or other tools for the evaluation of ability, achievement, interests, personality, psychopathology, or the like.
(e.g. MMPI, Intelligence Test, and etc.)
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Psychodynamic Psychotherapy
The psychological and psychoanalytic approach that views human behavior from the standpoint of unconscious motives that mold the personality, influence attitudes, and produce emotional disorder.
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Positive psychology

Positive psychology emphasizes traits, thinking patterns, behaviors, and experiences that are forward-thinking and can help improve the quality of a person’s day-to-day life. These may include optimism, spirituality, hopefulness, happiness, creativity, perseverance, and the practice of free will. 

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