Vocabulary & Check Your Knowledge

Mental Health Vocabulary

Addiction

The process of the misuse of medications, alcohol, or illegal substances.

Antisocial personality disorder

Behaviours that are against legal or social norms.

Anxiety

The state of feeling uneasiness, apprehension, worry or dread.

Autism spectrum disorder

An abnormal social interaction that may impact communication.

Bipolar Disorder

A manic-depressive disease that causes extreme shifts in a person’s mood and energy.

Dementia

The progressive loss of memory where someone may lose touch with reality, seem confused and develop a personality change.

Delirium

A state of confusion that is an irrational, agitated state.

Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)

The resource used by healthcare professionals in much of the world to diagnose mental disorders. The DSM contains descriptions of the conditions, symptoms, and other criteria for diagnosing mental disorders.

Dissociative identity disorder

A condition where the person has two or more distinct personalities. It was historically and commonly known as the older term split personality disorder.

Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD)

Anxiety which is not related to a specific situation; it is an uneasiness, apprehension, worry or dread reaction to various non-specific situations.

Hallucination

An unreal sensory perception with no external cause; it is not real. However, the client claims they can see, hear, touch, taste, or talk to this sensation.

Mania

A condition of madness, excessive excitement, or frenzy.

Mental health

A state of well-being in which an individual realizes their abilities, can cope with everyday stresses of ones’ life, work productively, and contribute to their community.

Mental disorder

An abnormal condition of the brain or the mind that affects how a person feels, behaves, or relates to others or their surroundings.

Narcissistic personality disorder

When a person has an abnormal sense of self-importance.

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)

A reoccurring preoccupation of an irresistible drive, such as checking locks, curling irons, skin picking, hoarding or excessive hand washing.

Panic disorder

A type of anxiety disorder, often called panic attacks. It causes feelings of terror that occur suddenly and repeatedly without any warning.

Phobias

A condition of irrational fear.

Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

Occurs after a traumatic event. It is an extended emotional response with flashbacks, nightmares, and often insomnia.

Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)

A form of depression that appears related to the fluctuations in the client’s exposure to natural sunlight.

Psychiatry

Deals with the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of mental disorders.

Psychiatrist

One who specializes in the treatment of the mind.

Psychology

The study of human behaviour and thought processes of the mind; it studies understanding how humans interact with their physical environment and each other.

Psychologist

A person who specializes in the study of the mind.

Psychotherapy

A method of treating mental disorders using psychological techniques instead of physical methods. It can involve talking, interpreting, listening, rewarding, and role-playing.

Psychosis

An abnormal condition of the mind accompanied by hallucinations or delusions.

Schizophrenia

A condition that causes the patient to live within a fantasy world where they have inappropriate thoughts that come out as behaviour. Often with schizophrenia, the patient may have delusions or illusions.

Somnambulism

The condition of sleepwalking.

Suicide

The willful ending of one’s own life. There is no clear suicide type, meaning no one can predict who will take their life. Always seek medical attention when considering or discussing suicide.

Tolerance

When a person becomes accustomed to a drug or the alcohol, therefore, they need a higher amount.

Withdrawal

A state where a person is attempting to come down from having a drug or alcohol over a long time.

 

Mental Health Reinforcement Activity

Mental Health Reinforcement Activity  (Text version)
  1. Psychology ______[Blank 1].
    1. is a medical specialty focused on childhood diseases.
    2. is the study of infectious diseases.
    3. is the study of human behaviour and thought processes of the mind.
    4. include sebaceous glands and sweat glands
  2. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) ________[Blank 2].
    1. is the resource used by healthcare professionals in much of the world to diagnose mental disorders.
    2. is a manual related to nutrition and healthy eating.
    3. a manual that provides statistical analysis of epidemiology.
    4. is a guideline for the treatment of childhood cancer.
  3. Anxiety is__________[Blank 3].
    1. the state of feeling uneasiness, apprehension, worry or dread.
    2. a treatment for common forms of skin cancer.
    3. the feeling that one is going to vomit.
    4. an infectious disease.
  4. Withdrawal is ________[Blank 4].
    1. a diagnostic test for colon cancer.
    2. an unusual presentation of a skin infection.
    3. a state where a person is attempting to come down from having a drug or alcohol over a long time.
    4. a symptom related to an endocrine disorder.

Check your answers: [1]

Activity source: Mental Health Reinforcement Activity by Open Learning at Conestoga College, licensed under CC BY 4.0.

Attribution

This page “Vocabulary & Check Your Knowledge” by Connie Stevens Marie Rutherford is licensed under CC BY 4.0.


  1. 1. c) is the study of human behaviour and thought processes of the mind, 2. a)is the resource used by healthcare professionals in much of the world to diagnose mental disorders, 3. a) the state of feeling uneasiness, apprehension, worry or dread, 4. c) a state where a person is attempting to come down from having a drug or alcohol over a long time.

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Building a Medical Terminology Foundation 2e Copyright © 2024 by Kimberlee Carter; Marie Rutherford; and Connie Stevens is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

Share This Book