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Symptom Assessment --- Physiology --- Pathology --- Diagnosis, Differential
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Qui sont ces somatisants qui semblent produire une maladie comme argument discursif dans le cadre d'un conflit avec leur environnement ? Cet ouvrage rend compte du fait qu'une lésion corporelle puisse venir attester la parole de l'individu sans être pour autant ni le texte conversionnel de l'hystérique, ni la manifestation mutique des agirs hors-symbole.Comment en rendre compte ? Le cancer de Tristane qui lui ôte la vie quelques jours avant une épreuve longtemps attendue par son père ; celui d'Electre qui stoppe son évolution maligne, sans aucune chimiothérapie, à la mort de sa mère ; les poussées d'eczéma de Florence chaque fois qu'elle rend visite à ses parents ; le psoriasis de Jehane si évidemment porteur du signe de l'horreur de l'histoire familiale et tant d'autres encore ! Somatiser devient parfois la seule façon de faire acte de présence en tant que sujet parlant. Sujet-limite, oscillant dans la turbulence de l'éphémère, mais sujet quand même, à n'importe quel prix, fut-il celui, paradoxal, de la mort même.
Medicine, Psychosomatic. --- Psychosomatic medicine. --- Somatic symptom disorder.
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Les auteurs s'appuient sur leur pratique analytique pour proposer une nouvelle vision de la psychosomatique qui considère non seulement les maladies mais aussi d'autres interactions entre le corps et le psychisme qui peuvent se manifester au quotidien. Ils présentent la somatisation comme une solution du corps à une désorganisation du sujet, dont l'origine peut remonter à la vie intra-utérine. ©Electre 2015
Somatic symptom disorder. --- Medicine, Psychosomatic --- Somatisation --- Médecine psychosomatique
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Somatic symptom disorder. --- Conversion disorder --- Somatisation --- Conversion (Psychanalyse)
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Over the last 50 years palliative care has usually been associated with cancer patients but more recently there has been increased discussion of the role of palliative care for neurological patients. In the past years, neurology has moved from being a purely diagnostic area to a very therapeutically active one. A further step needs to be taken to modify the therapeutic activity from “cure” to “care” depending on the patient’s disease trajectory. Palliative care has been associated with care at the end of life, whereas it may be appropriate earlier in the disease progression, and will extend after death in the support of bereaved families. The care of patients with neurological disease, and their families, will encompass the psychological, spiritual and existential issues and neurologists, and the teams in which they work, should develop skills to consider all aspects of care, in order to maximize the quality of life of all involved, and enable patients to die peacefully.
palliative care --- symptom control --- bereavement --- dying --- psychological care
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Depression --- Philosophy --- Depression. --- Emotional Depression --- Depressive Symptoms --- Depression, Emotional --- Depressions --- Depressions, Emotional --- Depressive Symptom --- Emotional Depressions --- Symptom, Depressive --- Symptoms, Depressive --- Mental philosophy --- Humanities
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Behçet's disease. --- Behcet syndrome --- Behçet triple symptom complex --- Behçet's syndrome --- Triple symptom complex --- Generative organs --- Mouth --- Skin --- Syndromes --- Uveitis --- Vasculitis --- Diseases
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Affect (Psychology) --- Affect --- Affective Symptoms --- Alexithymia --- Emotional Disturbances --- Affective Symptom --- Alexithymias --- Disturbance, Emotional --- Disturbances, Emotional --- Emotional Disturbance --- Symptom, Affective --- Symptoms, Affective --- Emotions --- Mood --- Affects --- Moods --- Psychology
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At least 20 million children worldwide would benefit from Pediatric Palliative Care (PPC) annually, and eight million children would need specialized PPC services. In the USA alone, more than 42,000 children, 0–19 years, die annually; fifty-five percent of them are infants younger than one year old. Interdisciplinary PPC is about matching treatment to patient goals and is considered specialized medical care for children with a serious illness. It is focused on relieving pain, distressing symptoms, and stress from a serious illness and is appropriate at any age and at any stage, together with curative treatment. The primary PPC goal is to improve the quality of life both for the child and for his/her family. Sadly, advances in the control of symptoms in children dying of life-limiting diseases have often not kept pace with treatment directed at curing the underlying disease. Data reveal that the majority of distressing symptoms in children with an advanced serious illness (such as pain, dyspnea and nausea/vomiting) are not treated, and, when treated, therapy is commonly ineffective. Emerging evidence shows that palliative care involvement results in improved quality of life, as well as prolongation of life. High-quality pediatric palliative care for children with serious illnesses is now an expected standard of medical care. However, there still remain significant barriers to achieving optimal care, related to lack of formal education, reimbursement issues, the emotional impact of caring for a dying child, and most importantly, the lack of interdisciplinary PPC teams with sufficient staffing. Fortunately, considerable advances have been made in recent years providing PPC around the globe both in resource-poor and resource-rich countries through care provided at children’s hospitals, outpatient palliative care clinics, palliative home care, and free-standing children’s hospice houses. This book, authored by leading authorities in the field, is dedicated to describing existing gaps, as well as the achievements made in clinical care, education, training, and research.
symptom management --- life-limiting disease --- quality of life --- hospice --- pediatric palliative care
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Quatrième de couverture : "Dans le monde, des centaines de milliers de personnes décident chaque année de mettre fin à leurs jours tandis que des centaines de millions d'autres tentent de le faire. Le suicide d'un patient est probablement l'un des phénomènes les plus graves que peut rencontrer un clinicien dans sa carrière. L'évaluation d'un tel passage à l'acte est un exercice clinique difficile, à haut risque et, encore aujourd'hui, incertain. L'ouvrage propose une synthèse de toutes les connaissances développées par la recherche scientifique en matière d'évaluation du potentiel suicidaire et décrit, par la présentation d'une méthode clinique éprouvée quotidiennement et des exemples réels, une pratique nécessitant de prendre des décisions rapides et rigoureuses pour sauver la vie des patients. Sont réunies ici toutes les connaissances disponibles actuellement en suicidologie : la conduite de l'évaluation des facteurs de risque, de l'activité psychiatrique, les ingrédients psychologiques qui produisent des idées suicidaires, toutes les phases du passage à l'acte, les différents types de tentatives de suicide ainsi que leurs fonctions psychopathologiques. Vous y trouverez également des grilles d'évaluation très complètes, testées depuis plusieurs années en service hospitalier, ainsi que des cas cliniques et des techniques d'entretien."
Self-Injurious Behavior --- Suicide --- Symptom Assessment --- Suicidal behavior --- Comportement suicidaire --- psychology --- Risk factors --- Facteurs de risque --- Self-Injurious Behavior. --- Prévention --- Evaluation --- Prevention --- Symptom Assessment. --- psychology. --- Prévention. --- Evaluation. --- Suicide - psychology --- Prévention.
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