Disorder
in sentence
626 examples of Disorder in a sentence
With the greater number of medications approved for the treatment of bipolar disorder, along with multiple reports cautioning clinicians against under-diagnosis, it appears that over-diagnosis has become a greater problem than under-diagnosis.
Nor is it the risk of chronic
disorder
in an arc of instability that now runs from the Maghreb all the way to the Hindu Kush.
The Erosion of LawMADRID – In assessments of global events and trends in 2014, words like chaos, disorder, and fragmentation are likely to feature prominently.
For the time being, they rather give the impression to have thrown sandbags in
disorder
in an attempt to stop a wave.
The problem is that Trump likes disorder; that’s how he had run his business, and he doesn’t take well to being managed.
Claiming to be suffering from a
disorder
such as “sexual addiction,” or checking into a rehabilitation clinic for “treatment,” as Weinstein has reportedly done, fits with a classic Machiavellian response.
For most people, stability, even if imposed by authoritarian means, trumps
disorder.
The challenge for the neuropsychologist is to show how a
disorder
in the brain can lead to these bizarre experiences.
It failed miserably, as have similar approaches to every other stress-related psychiatric disorder, including depression and anxiety, for which hopes were equally high.
No one in the region should wish for a return to the pre-1940s
disorder.
But it is we who must deal with the reality and consequences of the region's current
disorder.
Even if the UK economy does not fall into outright recession after this vote (the pound’s decline might cushion the initial blow), there is every chance that the resulting economic and political
disorder
will give some who voted to leave “buyers’ remorse.”
Then there is France, where President Emmanuel Macron – once hailed as Europe’s next de facto leader – has faced a wave of protests and civil
disorder
in recent weeks.
People complain about
disorder
in the Trump administration, but Clinton’s White House was so disorganized that he had to bring in Leon Panetta as Chief of Staff and David Gergen as a communications counselor to right the ship.
But this reality is extremely fragile, since no new world order has taken the place of the old one, and we have entered a period of
disorder.
Resolving such conflicts requires social alliances, which are invariably undermined by discontent, civil disorder, and political instability.
In fact, despite a consensus that ECT is the most effective treatment for severe depressive disorder, it comes at the bottom of the list in most treatment regimens for mood disorders.
Indeed, the great arc stretching from Cairo to the Hindu Kush threatens to become the locus of global
disorder.
Chaotic border scenes from Calais, Macedonia, and Kos reinforced the image of
disorder.
For all these reasons, I believe that a Kurdish nation-state will be a force for peace, not disorder, in the Middle East, a stormy region that is threatened by the worst of ideologies and by the violence that they beget.
Those opposed to such rampant use of drugs note that diagnostic rates for bipolar disorder, in particular, have skyrocketed by 4,000% and that overmedication is impossible without over-diagnosis.
After several requests to the American Psychiatric Association, I was granted complete access to the hundreds of unpublished memos, letters, and even votes from the period between 1973 and 1979, when the DSM-III task force debated each new and existing
disorder.
Experts pressed for the inclusion of illnesses as questionable as “chronic undifferentiated unhappiness disorder” and “chronic complaint disorder,” whose traits included moaning about taxes, the weather, and even sports results.
By the 1990’s experts were calling it “the
disorder
of the decade,” insisting that as many as one in five Americans suffers from it.
The list of common behaviors associated with the
disorder
gave him pause: fear of eating alone in restaurants, avoidance of public toilets, and concern about trembling hands.
By the time a revised task force added dislike of public speaking in 1987, the
disorder
seemed sufficiently elastic to include virtually everyone on the planet.
After all, despite the impairment clause, the anxiety
disorder
mushroomed; by 2000, it was the third most common psychiatric
disorder
in America, behind only depression and alcoholism.
Instead of sustained peace and “ever-closer union,” Europeans are experiencing episodes of
disorder
and violence almost on a daily basis.
Disorder, war, and even disease can flood into the vacuum when, as Antonio Gramsci put it in his Prison Notebooks, “the old is dying and the new cannot be born.”
A mother fleeing domestic abuse with her children has different needs than a veteran with post-traumatic stress
disorder.
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