Sentences with phrase «serious psychological illness»

Not exact matches

«This budget, if enacted, would jeopardize our nation's educational, scientific and health enterprises and limit access to critically needed mental and behavioral health services,» said Antonio E. Puente, president of the American Psychological Society (APS) in Washington, D.C. «These cuts would disproportionately affect people living in poverty, people with serious mental illness and other disabilities, women, children, people living with HIV / AIDS, older adults, ethnic and racial minorities, immigrants, and members of the LGBTQ community.»
While men are more likely to suffer serious chronic illnesses, such as heart disease and hypertension, as a result of stress, women tend to suffer from a much wider variety of psychological and physical complaints.
The Critical Care Recovery Center (CCRC) care model developed by the Regenstrief Institute and IU Center for Aging Research scientists is the nation's first collaborative care concept focusing on the extensive cognitive, physical, and psychological recovery needs of intensive care unit survivors and decreasing the likelihood of serious illness after discharge from an ICU.
The staff at Butler Hospital understand the psychological, social, biological and medical factors that can complicate a serious mental illness and offer patients the best care in a supportive, therapeutic setting.
The Essential plan offers up to a $ 2,500 payout for withdrawal due to a student's psychological condition, serious illness, injury or death.
If you want more protection, the Preferred plan returns up to 100 percent of tuition and other covered college costs if a student suffers serious covered illness, injury or death, and up to 80 percent if he or she withdraws because of a psychological condition.
For budget - conscious parents and students, the Essential plan offers up to a $ 2,500 payout for withdrawal due to a student's psychological condition, covered serious illness, injury or death.
For more protection, the Preferred plan returns up to 100 percent of tuition and other covered college costs if a student suffers a serious covered illness, injury or death, and up to 80 percent if he or she withdraws because of a covered psychological condition.
In the result, the judge declared the impugned provisions to be unconstitutional and of no force and effect to the extent they prohibited physician - assisted suicide in the case of a «fully - informed, non-ambivalent competent adult patient who: (a) is free from coercion and undue influence, is not clinically depressed, and who personally (not through a substitute decision - maker) requests physician - assisted death; and (b) is materially physically disabled or is soon to become so, has been diagnosed by a medical practitioner as having a serious illness, disease or disability... is in a state of advanced weakening capacities with no chance of improvement, has an illness as determined by reference treatment options acceptable to the person, and has an illness causing enduring physical or psychological suffering that is intolerable to that person and can not be alleviated by any medical treatment acceptable to that person».
(a) they have a serious and incurable illness, disease or disability; (b) they are in an advanced state of irreversible decline in capability; (c) that illness, disease or disability or that state of decline causes them enduring physical or psychological suffering that is intolerable to them and that can not be relieved under conditions that they consider acceptable; and (d) their natural death has become reasonably foreseeable, taking into account all of their medical circumstances, without a prognosis necessarily having been made as to the specific length of time that they have remaining.
«A significant number of students will have to leave school unexpectedly due to an illness, injury or serious psychological issue sometime during their college career.
Types of traumatic experiences are varied yet distinct, including sexual abuse or assault, physical abuse or assault, emotional / psychological maltreatment, neglect, serious accident or medical illness, witness to domestic violence, victim / witness to community violence, school violence, natural or manmade disasters, forced displacement, war / terrorism, victim / witness to extreme personal / interpersonal violence, traumatic grief / separation, and system - induced trauma.
Trauma can be both a medical and psychological event in the eyes of children and families experiencing serious illnesses, injuries, or painful procedures.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z