Describe the differences between feeling sad and depressed versus experiencing a major depressive disorder. Be sure to mention the diagnostic criteria for major depressive disorder in your answer

What will be an ideal response?

At some point in time, you may have felt kind of down, perhaps because you got a lower mark than you expected on a test after studying hard, or you broke up with your boyfriend or girlfriend, or worse yet, one of your grandparents died. Your feelings during this period may have reflected being very sad. Perhaps you remember crying; maybe you felt listless, and you couldn't seem to get up the energy to study or go out with your friends. It may be that you feel this way once in a while for no good, and your friends think you're moody.
If you are like most people, you know your mood will pass. You will be back to your old self in a few days or a week. If you never felt down and always saw only what was good in a situation, it would be more unusual (and would also seem so to your friends) than if you were depressed once in a while. Feelings of depression (and joy) are universal, which makes it all the more difficult to understand disorders of mood, disorders that can be so incapacitating that violent suicide may seem by far a better option than living.
The DSM-5 criteria indicate an extremely depressed mood state that lasts at least two weeks and includes cognitive symptoms (such as feelings of worthlessness and indecisiveness) and disturbed physical functions (such as altered sleeping patterns, significant changes in appetite and weight, or a notable loss of energy) to the point that even the slightest activity or movement requires an overwhelming effort. The episode is typically accompanied by a general loss of interest in things and an inability to experience any pleasure from life, including interactions with family or friends or accomplishments at work or at school. Although all symptoms are important, evidence suggests that the most central indicators of a full major depressive episode are the physical changes (sometimes called somatic or vegetative symptoms, along with the behavioral and emotional "shutdown," as reflected by low scores on behavioral activation scales. Anhedonia (loss of energy and inability to engage in pleasurable activities or have any "fun") is more characteristic of these severe episodes of depression than are, for example, reports of sadness or distress or the tendency to cry, which occurs equally in depressed and nondepressed individuals (mostly women in both cases). The duration of a major depressive episode, if untreated, is approximately four to nine months.

Psychology

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Our sense of smell is called:

a. gustation b. olfaction c. phrenology d. kinesthesia

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Which of the following is an accurate representation of the life of a mental patient in the early 1900s?

a. Mental patients were sentenced to prison. b. Hospitals sold tickets so people could come and observe the behavior of mental patients. c. Mental patients were kept in huge, overcrowded hospitals with little supervision. d. Hospitals used drug therapy to treat mental patients.

Psychology