After all, if it's
serious symptom reporting you're after — if you really want to notice and document the gory details each day — you need to get yourself a diary, app, or robot, because the real people in your life don't really want to hear it.
Not exact matches
Available free of charge on MomsTEAM's new SmartTeams concussion website, the #TeamUp4ConcussionSafetyTM program, developed by MomsTEAM Institute as part of its SmartTeams Play SafeTM initiative with a Mind Matters Educational Challenge Grant from the National Collegiate Athletic Association and Department of Defense, is designed to do just that: to increase
reporting by athletes of concussion
symptoms by engaging coaches, athletes, parents, and health care providers in a season - long, indeed career - long program which emphasizes that immediate
reporting of concussion
symptoms - not just by athletes themselves but by their teammate «buddies» - not only reduces the risk the athlete will suffer a more
serious brain injury - or, in rare cases, even death - but is actually helps the team's chances of winning, not just in that game, but, by giving athletes the best chance to return as quickly as possible from concussion, the rest of the season, and by teaching that honest
reporting is a valued team behavior and a hallmark of a good teammate.
In a 2005 study of 454 undergraduates, psychologist Sari Gold of Temple University and her colleagues revealed that students who had experienced nontraumatic stressors, such as
serious illness in a loved one, divorce of their parents, relationship problems or imprisonment of someone close to them,
reported even higher rates of PTSD
symptoms than did students who had lived through bona fide trauma.
Many patients
report the fact that anti-depressant medications saved their lives, radically turning around
serious and debilitating
symptoms.
One research group recently estimated that about 15 % of elderly people who lost their sense of taste did so due to zinc deficiency, and some others did so due to more
serious conditions; so make sure to
report this
symptom to your doctor if you develop it.
Symptoms may not appear for several years and the effects can be very
serious so it's important you
report any changes in behaviour - such as loss of appetite, lethargy, aversion to exercise, difficulty breathing — to your vet, and be sure to get regular check - ups.
In other breeds more significant
symptoms have been
reported; lymphadenopathy and more often in Labradors and Golden Retrievers,
serious kidney disease with protein losing nephropathy which may not respond to antibiotics.
Some Havanese breeders have
reported that all cases of early - onset cataracts leading to premature blindness, and nearly all «other
serious health problems
reported in Havanese within the past few years, have been in dogs that also exhibit the
symptoms [of chondrodysplasia].»
The
report is also one of the first of its kind to study how climate change impacts mental health, noting that people «exposed to climate - or weather - related natural disasters experience stress reactions and
serious mental health consequences, including
symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depressions, and general anxiety.»
In some cases, patients have
reported serious symptoms including:
Anxiety disorders are among the most common mental disorders during childhood and adolescence, with a prevalence of 3 — 5 % in school - age children (6 — 12 years) and 10 — 19 % in adolescents (13 — 18 years); 1, 2 and the prevalence of anxiety disorders in this population tends to increase over time.3 Anxiety is the most common psychological
symptom reported by children and adolescents; however, presentation varies with age as younger patients often
report undifferentiated anxiety
symptoms, for example, muscle tension, headache, stomachache or angry outbursts.4 According to the standard diagnostic systems, there are various types of anxiety disorders, for example, generalised anxiety disorder (GAD), social phobias (SOP), social anxiety disorder (SAD), panic disorder (PD), overanxious disorder, separation anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), obsessive - compulsive disorder (OCD).5 Anxiety disorders in children and adolescents often occur with a number of comorbidities, such as autism spectrum disorders, 6 depressive disorders, 7 conduct disorder, 8 substance abuse9 or suicide - related behaviour.10 Youths with anxiety disorders experience
serious impairment in social functioning (eg, poor school achievement; relational problems with family members and peers).11, 12 Childhood and adolescent anxiety disorders can persist despite treatment, 1 and they are associated with later adult psychopathology.13, 14