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Im just curious because of personal reasons

2006-10-19 17:21:52 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous in Health Other - Health

Thanks for the answers b/c i've been like that and I was just wondering what it is thanks again

2006-10-19 17:27:49 · update #1

10 answers

Signs of Depression

Everyone feels sad or gets down from time to time, but sometimes it’s more than that. Sometimes, it can be clinical depression.

Clinical depression affects more than 19 million Americans each year.

Unfortunately, less than half of the people who have clinical depression seek treatment. Many people believe that it is a “normal” part of life and that they will pull out of it on their own. Untreated depression causes unnecessary suffering and disruption in daily life and work, and costs about $44 billion a year in lost workdays, decreased productivity, sick leave and other costs.

Depression is a real illness. The good news is that it can be treated, and that success rates for treatment are very high.
KNOW THE SIGNS

The signs and symptoms of clinical depression are:

* Persistent sad, anxious or "empty" mood
* Changes in sleep patterns
* Reduced appetite and weight loss, or increased appetite and weight gain
* Loss of pleasure and interest in once-enjoyable activities, including sex
* Restlessness, irritability
* Persistent physical symptoms that do not respond to treatment, such as chronic pain or digestive disorders
* Difficulty concentrating at work or at school, or difficulty remembering things or making decisions
* Fatigue or loss of energy
* Feeling guilty, hopeless or worthless
* Thoughts of suicide or death

If you experience five or more of these symptoms for two weeks or longer, you could have clinical depression. See a doctor or qualified mental health professional for help, right away.

If you are supervising an employee who exhibits any of these symptoms and has frequent, unexcused absences, discuss the situation with the individual, but do not try to diagnose the problem. Suggest that the employee seek help from his or her doctor or from an Employee Assistance Program (EAP).
Seeking help is the healthy thing to do!

For more information, visit the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill at http://www.nami.org/ (External Link) for links to local chapters, or the National Mental Health Association, 800-969-NMHA (6642) or visit www.nmha.org (External Link).

2006-10-19 17:29:32 · answer #1 · answered by Kate 4 · 0 0

Symptoms of depression include the following:

Difficulty concentrating, remembering details, and making decisions
Fatigue and decreased energy
Feelings of guilt, worthlessness, and/or helplessness
Feelings of hopelessness and/or pessimism
Insomnia, early-morning wakefulness, or excessive sleeping
Irritability, restlessness
Loss of interest in activities or hobbies once pleasurable, including sex
Overeating or appetite loss
Persistent aches or pains, headaches, cramps, or digestive problems that do not ease even with treatment
Persistent sad, anxious, or "empty" feelings
Thoughts of suicide, suicide attempts

2014-05-28 22:43:02 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Symptoms of Depression People who're depressed or manic won't enjoy the entire following signs. Some can have many signs, others can have only a few. The severity of the indicators can also be distinctive for each character or even differ through the years. If you're experiencing a few of these signs or if in case you have questions approximately whether or not you'll be depressed or manic, you must seek advice together with your health care professional or a professional intellectual wellness respectable. If you or anybody you already know is considering that suicide, or has made plans to take action, you must search the support of a intellectual wellness respectable or health care professional instantly. * Sadness, anxiousness, or "empty" emotions * Decreased vigor, fatigue, being "bogged down" * Loss of curiosity or pride in pursuits that have been as soon as loved, adding intercourse * Insomnia, oversleeping, or waking a lot previous than normal * Loss of weight or urge for food, or overeating and weight achieve * Feelings of hopelessness and pessimism * Feelings of helplessness, guilt, and worthlessness * Thoughts of demise or suicide, or suicide makes an attempt * Difficulty concentrating, making selections, or remembering * Restlessness, irritability or immoderate crying * Chronic aches and pains or bodily disorders that don't reply to therapy

2016-08-31 23:49:04 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Passiveness, Carelessness, Hopelessness.
Poor decision making skills.
Poor memory.
Irritabilty.

If you are feeling depressed try becoming more aware of your thought patterns and the way those thoughts are making you feel.
Make an effort to not repeat those thought patterns and to replace them with solution focused thoughts. this isnt easy to do, but your bad thoughts that make you depressed are usually because your caught in unhealthy thought patterns, the more you indulge in them the easier it gets to feel depressed, but if you catch yourself indulging in your thoughts of pain hate hopelessness, what you havent got, what others got or, why me, and just asking yourself stupid questions, break the thought pattern because you know its ineffective, then focus on a solution to your problem, or replace it with a memory that makes you feel great. a childhood memory perhaps, like christmas. then slowly after a peroid of two weeks of effort these patterns will have faded and youll be in touch will good thoughts and ideas about how to fix whats wrong in your life or reasons why your life is so worth living.

2006-10-19 17:40:59 · answer #4 · answered by autonomous1980 1 · 1 0

Signs of Depression are as follows:

Loss of Apetite
Loss of Sleep
sad
moody
Not interested in what they are doing
complete loner-introverted


You can always go to webmd.com for more information or any mental health web site.

2006-10-19 17:31:18 · answer #5 · answered by steve s 3 · 0 0

sleeping a lot, lack of motivation to the point where you do nothing, crying often and not knowing why, feeling like there is an impending sense of doom with you all the time.

If it's you see someone about it cos it's a revolting feeling to go on with and mine wasn't severe. If it's someone else try to help them too.

2006-10-19 17:25:55 · answer #6 · answered by sandiemay01 3 · 0 0

Symptoms
According to the DSM-IV-TR criteria for diagnosing a major depressive disorder (cautionary statement) one of the following two elements must be present for a period of at least two weeks:

Depressed mood, or
Anhedonia
It is sufficient to have either of these symptoms in conjunction with five of a list of other symptoms over a two-week period. These include:

Feelings of overwhelming sadness and/or fear, or the seeming inability to feel emotion (emptiness).
A decrease in the amount of interest or pleasure in all, or almost all, daily activities.
Changing appetite and marked weight gain or loss.
Disturbed sleep patterns, such as insomnia, loss of REM sleep, or excessive sleep (Hypersomnia).
Psychomotor agitation or retardation nearly every day.
Fatigue, mental or physical, also loss of energy.
Intense feelings of guilt, helplessness, hopelessness, worthlessness, isolation/loneliness and/or anxiety.
Trouble concentrating, keeping focus or making decisions or a generalized slowing and obtunding (to dull or blunt, especially sensation or pain) of cognition, including memory.
Recurrent thoughts of death (not just fear of dying), desire to just "lay down and die" or "stop breathing", recurrent suicidal ideation without a specific plan, or a suicide attempt or a specific plan for committing suicide.
Feeling and/or fear of being abandoned by those close to one.
Other symptoms often reported but not usually taken into account in diagnosis include:

Self-loathing.
A decrease in self-esteem.
Inattention to personal hygiene.
Sensitivity to noise.
Physical aches and pains, and the belief these may be signs of serious illness.
Fear of 'going mad'.
Change in perception of time.
Periods of sobbing.
Possible behavioral changes, such as aggression and/or irritability.
Depression in children is not as obvious as it is in adults. Here are some symptoms that children might display:

Loss of appetite.
Irritability.
Sleep problems, such as recurrent nightmares.
Learning or memory problems where none existed before.
Significant behavioral changes; such as withdrawal, social isolation, and aggression.
An additional indicator could be the excessive use of drugs or alcohol. Depressed adolescents are at particular risk of further destructive behaviours, such as eating disorders and self-harm.

One of the most widely used instruments for measuring depression severity is the Beck Depression Inventory, a 21-question multiple choice survey.

It is hard for people who have not experienced clinical depression, either personally or by regular exposure to people suffering it, to understand its emotional impact and severity, interpreting it instead as being similar to "having the blues" or "feeling down." As the list of symptoms above indicates, clinical depression is a serious, potentially lethal systemic disorder characterized by the psychiatric industry as interlocking physical, affective, and cognitive symptoms that have consequences for function and survival well beyond sad or painful feelings.

http://www.isitreallydepression.com/mini_c/isitreallydepression/

2006-10-19 18:06:08 · answer #7 · answered by Ajeesh Kumar 4 · 0 0

Persistent in being sad, anxious or a empty mood.
Changes in sleep patterns Reduced appetite and weight gain.
Loss of pleasure, interest in once enjoyable activities, including sex.
Restless, difficulty concentrating and remembering things.
Fatigue, loss of energy.
Feeling guilty, hopeless and worthless.
Thoughts of death or suicide.

2006-10-19 17:39:15 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

sleeping too much or too little, nervousness, anxiety, sadness, feelings of inadaquacy, lack of appetite or change in appetite, mood swings

2006-10-19 17:24:30 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

lethargy, inability to complete things,lowered sex drive,sleeping way more than usual, crying, confusion,pain are some symptoms please see a mental health practioner //// it's nothing to be ashamed about love and healing

2006-10-19 17:29:34 · answer #10 · answered by ancientcityentertainment 2 · 0 0

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