Treating Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD #2)

COPD can’t be cured, but its symptoms can be treated. Learn the methods that doctors use to make patients with this breathing disorder more comfortable.Watch More Health Videos at Health Guru: http://www.healthguru.com/?YT

Understanding Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD#1)

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease affects 12 million Americans—most of them smokers. Here, we’ll cover the basics on America’s fourth leading cause of death.Watch More Health Videos at Health Guru: http://www.healthguru.com/?YT

Four Things that Counselors Don’t Know About Social Anxiety Disorder

This video answers the question: What are some things that counselors may not know about Social Anxiety Disorder. When I use the term counselor at least in the context of this video I’m really talking about anyone who delivers talk therapy. Symptoms of Social Anxiety Disorder in Diagnostic and Statistical Manual -Fear or anxiety in social situations (humiliated embarrassed or rejected) -social situations almost always provoke fear or anxiety (not occasional) -social situations may be avoided or endured with intense anxiety -fear or anxiety is out of proportion to the actual threat -symptoms need to be present for six months or more and need to cause clinically significant distress or impairment Four things that counselors may not know about Social Anxiety Disorder: 1. Not understanding the relationship between trauma and social anxiety disorder 2. Understanding the chronic nature of the illness 3. Not considering exposure therapy when looking at treatment options 4. How to use the panic attack specifier Norton, A. R., & Abbott, M. J. (2017). Bridging the Gap between Aetiological and Maintaining Factors in Social Anxiety Disorder: The Impact of Socially Traumatic Experiences on Beliefs, Imagery and Symptomatology. Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy, 24(3), 747–765.

Stress Response: Savior to Killer

As we’ve evolved, the human stress response has saved our lives. Today, we turn on the same life-saving physical reaction to cope with intense, ongoing stressors – and we can’t seem to turn it off. Robert Sapolsky, Professor of Neurology and Neurological Sciences at Stanford University, reveals just how dangerous prolonged exposure to stress can be in the documentary, “Stress: Portrait of a Killer.”Stress: Portrait of a Killer Website: http://killerstress.stanford.edu/Stanford University:
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Stanford University Channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/stanford/