Anxiety in social situations is not a rare problem: Around one in ten people are affected by social anxiety
disorder during their lifetime.
Did you know that one in eight women will develop a thyroid
disorder during her lifetime?
Here's a sobering fact: 30 million people in the U.S. will suffer from a diagnosable eating
disorder during their lifetime, while many more cases go unreported.
One - third of Danish people will receive secondary care treatment for a mental
disorder during their lifetime
More than 3 million Americans will experience panic
disorder during their lifetime.
Not exact matches
An estimated 8 % of Americans will suffer from post traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) at some point
during their
lifetime.
1 in 3 Europeans will suffer from a brain
disorder during his or her
lifetime.
Brain - related
disorders are expected to affect at least one in three persons
during their
lifetime, costing some $ 800 billion every year in Europe.
In fact, best estimates reveal that
during a
lifetime, more than 25 % of individuals develop at least one mental or behavioral
disorder.
The American Thyroid Association reports that one in eight women in the United States is impacted by a thyroid
disorder at some point
during their
lifetime.
The results of the clinical interview that assessed
lifetime history of having an eating
disorder indicated that 6 % of girls met criteria for a frank eating
disorder in mid-adolescence and about 5 % of the sample met criteria for a
disorder during the young adult years.
Yet, how does the view that patients with personality
disorders don't suffer accord with the fact that ten percent of individuals with Borderline Personality
Disorder will commit suicide
during their
lifetime?
In addition,
lifetime histories of maternal and paternal anxiety, depressive, disruptive, personality, and substance use
disorders were assessed
during the 1991 - 1993 maternal interview using items adapted from the New York High Risk Study Family Interview.47 Data regarding the onset of maternal and paternal
disorders permitted identification of psychiatric
disorders that were evident by the 1985 - 1986 interview.
According to the National Eating Disorders Association (NEDA), national surveys have estimated that in the United States about 20 million women and 10 million men will develop an eating
disorder at some point
during their
lifetime.
During their
lifetime, probands had significantly more ASPD and SUDs but not mood or anxiety
disorders and more psychiatric hospitalizations and incarcerations than comparison participants.
Mothers either met criteria for a major depressive
disorder (MDD)
during their child's
lifetime (n = 96) or had no
lifetime diagnosis of any DSM - IV mood
disorder and no current Axis I diagnosis (n = 107).