Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on CLINICAL DEPRESSION: AN OVERVIEW
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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 12 page paper discusses clinical depression and gives a broad and general overview of the condition, the sub-genres, diagnosis, causes and symptoms. Practices by various psychotherapists, drugs utilized, diagnosis criteria are also included. Congressional testimony is quoted, as well as information from experts in the field. All quotes cited from text. Bibliography lists 12 sources.
Page Count:
12 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MBdeprsed.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
to day conversations. To be clinically depressed is a very real, and very devastating condition; a condition that is vastly different from the ordinary bout of the blues that individuals
experience from time to time. In fact, depression can run the gambit from manic episodes to suicidal attempts. The clinical diagnosis and definition of the field of depression is vast.
The bottom line is that untreated depression is the number one cause, experts state, for suicide. This condition seems to be so wide spread among the population that most people
will in the course of their lifetime deal with someone who is depressed or will personally be effected by it. Thus, it becomes critical that an education of the general
population take place on this serious condition, which is as much a medical killer as heart disease, AIDS, and cancer. What makes depression more insidious, is that there often are
very few physical indications and heavier mental implications. It is obvious that in most of society that mental health takes a back seat to physical health, and unfortunately, too many
lives are lost because of this false assumption. And what makes this such a tragedy is that depression is totally treatable. So what is clinical depression, per se? Most
experts agree that clinical depression is a depression that does not go away with accompanying feelings of worthlessness and despair. There are some sub-classifications which include: unipolar disorder, biopolar, and
dysthymia(Deren 2002). An example of someone who is unipolar would be a person who has recurring bouts of severe depression that lasts for as little as a few hours to
months on end. Loss of motivation, sleeplessness, and hopelessness are characteristic. In these states, the sufferer is most likely to contemplate suicide. Manic depression tends to include bouts of complete
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