Upon being left alone, affected dogs may
develop high levels of anxiety, which ultimately leads to the buildup of tension.
Not exact matches
In a Depression and
Anxiety study that surveyed youth following the terrorist attack at the 2013 Boston marathon, adolescents with lower
levels of sympathetic reactivity (the flight or fight response) before the attack
developed posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms only following
high exposure to media coverage
of the attack.
A
high level of anxiety during pregnancy is linked with postnatal depression which in turn is associated with increased risk
of developing depression later in life.
The results suggested that
higher levels of PA at baseline were associated with an 11 % reduced risk
of developing anxiety over the next 5 years, and a 15 % reduced risk
of becoming depressed.
Most
of the students in this book, either through their own drivenness or through the interventions
of adults — either parents, teachers, or related services people, therapists and so forth —
develop the strategies they needed to be successful: to be able to access education at a
high level; to know how to handle the heavy reading load when they read at a very low rate; to learn how to manage pain, which was the case with one
of the students in the book who has chronic pain due to his physical disabilities; or to learn how to manage
anxiety, which is the case
of two
of the people in the book.
Over half
of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who experience racial discrimination report feelings
of psychological distress, meaning they can go on to
develop anxiety and depression.1 There is also a «dose» effect: the risk
of high or very
high levels of psychological distress increases as the volume
of racism increases.3
People who experienced separations from significant others, especially early in life, may
develop high levels of death
anxiety as death is experienced as the ultimate separation from a close person.
High levels of anxiety symptoms in parents appear to compound early risk for disorder such that the offspring
of more anxious parents display more negative affect (Rosenbaum et al., 1988) and are at greater risk for
developing anxiety problems relative to offspring
of non-anxious parents (Beidel and Turner, 1997).
Parents raising children with ASD have been found to report
higher levels of parenting stress, depression and
anxiety, and increased general life stress than parents raising children with Down syndrome (DS), cerebral palsy (CP), fragile X syndrome (FXS), intellectual disability (ID), cystic fibrosis (CF) or typically
developing (TD) children [e.g. 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17].