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Stress

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Answer
Stress   a state produced by a change in the environment that is perceived as challenging, threatening or damaging to one’s well-being; body’s arousal response to any demand, change, or perceived threat  
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Stressors   disruptive forces operating within or on any system – things that cause stress.  
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Appraisal   how one interprets the impact of the stressors on themselves;  
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Anxiety   a feeling of apprehension, uneasiness, uncertainty, or dread resulting from a real or perceived threat whose actual source is unknown or unrecognized  
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Fear   a reaction to a specific danger  
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Endorphins   peptides - hormones that act on the mind producing a sense of well-being - act like morphine or opioids – exercise kicks in too  
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Homeostasis   a relative constancy in the internal environment of the body, naturally maintained by adaptive responses that promote healthy survival  
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Adaptive response   an appropriate reaction to an environmental demand  
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Trauma   if stress persists beyond duration of stressor, person has experienced a trauma.  
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Fight or flight response   rxn prepares person for action by increasing hr, divert blood from intestines to brain & muscles; increasing bp, resp rate, & blood sugar– arousal of symp NS  
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Neurophysiological responses to stress   function through negative feedback & triggers an adaptive response  
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Major mechanisms of response to a stressor are controlled by   Medulla Oblongata, Reticular Formation, and Pituitary Gland  
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Medulla Oblongata   controls vital functions through NS – controls HR, BP, & resp – HR increases in response to sympathetic fibers & decreases w/parasympathetic fibers.  
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Reticular Formation   helps control vital functions through neurons – cause sleeping person to wake or increases level of consciousness when needed  
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Pituitary Gland   produces hormones necessary for adaptation to stress & regulates other hormones like ACTH which in turn produces cortisol - regulates thyroid, gonadal, & parathyroid hormones – plays role in epinephrine & norepinephrine  
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Stress-Adaptation Model   General Adaptation Syndrome (GAS) - Theory states a “stressor” can be pos or neg - Stressors produce same symptoms in a variety of individuals without regard to the individual stressor  
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General Adaptation Syndrome   Stress signals pituitary gland & hypothalamus – endorphins secreted - 3-stage rxn to stress – describes how body responds to stress  
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Alarm reaction involves several body systems   especially autonomic NS & endocrine system - rising hormone levels incr blood vol, blood glucose, epinephrine & norepinephrine amounts, HR, blood flow to muscles, fight or flight – lasts 1 min – hours  
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When body encounters physical demand like injury, __ initiates GAS   pituitary gland  
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Alarm Stage   Increased level of alertness, Increased level of anxiety, Task-oriented, defense-oriented, inefficient or maladaptive behavior may result  
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Resistance stage   Body stabilizes & responds in opposite manner to alarm rxn - Optimal adaptation to stress; body stabilizes; hormone levels, HR, BP, & CO return to normal; body repairs any damage  
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Exhaustion Stage   Individual’s ability to resist stress is lost, Body resources depleted: decreased immune resp; suppression of T cells; depletion of adrenal glands & hormone production; enlarged lymph nodes.  
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If exhaustion stage not stopped   can progress to cardiac failure, renal failure and death.  
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Primary appraisal   person evaluates the event, decides if it is personally significant  
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Secondary appraisal   person ID event as harmful, potential for loss, threat, or challenge = stress; OK, how do I cope?  
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Coping   process by which a person deals with stress, solves problems, and makes decisions  
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Coping mechanism   way of adjusting to environmental stress w/o altering goals or purpose (conscious or unconscious  
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ego defense mechanism   Freud – everyone unconsciously protects against feelings of worthlessness and anxiety  
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Distress   damaging stress  
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Acute   traumatic event; fear  
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Chronic   prolonged reaction to the event; may have “flashbacks”  
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PTSD   Begins w/Acute stress disorder (ASD) – person witnesses or is confronted w/traumatic event & responds w/intense fear, helplessness, or horror.  
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Eustress   stress that produces (protects) health (happiness, hopefulness, etc) – motivating energy – purposeful movement  
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Crisis   When person facing a turning point in life where their previous ways of coping are not effective and person must change.  
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Developmental   As person moves through life  
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Situational   stress arising from job change/chronic illness such as obesity, hypertension, DM, asthma, etc. – car accident  
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Maturational   stresses varying w/life stage such as death of parent/child; teenagers, growing older  
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Sociocultural   prolonged poverty, physical handicap, violence, imprisonment, etc.  
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Medical conditions such as __ that are common in older adults initially present symptoms that mimic the consequences of stress and anxiety   hypoxia and thyroid dysfunction  
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Assertiveness training   helps individuals communicate their needs effectively.  
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Normal Anxiety   Health life force necessary for survival - Provides energy needed to carry our daily tasks, striving for goals, making survival changes, promotes constructive behaviors  
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Acute anxiety   Precipitated by imminent loss or change that threatens ones sense of security and self concept – called state anxiety  
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Chronic anxiety   anxiety a person has lived w/for a period of time, trait anxiety  
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Symptoms of Chronic Anxiety   Chronic fatigue – pt might sleep all the time, Insomnia, Discomfort in daily activities, Discomfort in daily relationships, Poor concentration  
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Secondary Anxiety   Due to physiological abnormalities, Need to determine if anxiety is due to medical condition, Up to 40% of anxiety may be warning of underlying physiological process  
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Mild   Occurs in normal experience of daily living, Person’s ability to perceive reality is brought into sharp focus, Person sees, hears & grasps more information & problem solving - becomes more effective  
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Moderate Anxiety   Perceptual field narrows & some details are excluded from observation, Selective inattention: certain things in the environment observed unless brought to attention  
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Learning and problem solving are not possible at this level and the person may be dazed and confused   severe anxiety  
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Severe Anxiety   Perceptual field greatly reduced, may focus on one particular detail or many scattered details – may be oblivious  
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Severe Anxiety: Physical Symptoms   increased severity in somatic symptoms such as HA, nausea, dizziness, insomnia, Trembling, Pounding heart, Hyperventilation, dread  
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Repression   exclusion of unpleasant or unwanted experiences, emotions or ideas from conscious awareness  
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Sublimation   substituting constructive & socially acceptable activity from strong impulses - not acceptable in their original form - impulses are sexual or aggressive in nature  
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Regression   ego returns to an earlier more comfortable, although less mature way of behaving  
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Displacement   transfer of emotions associated w/particular person, object or situation to another person object or situation that is non-threatening  
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Projection   unconsciously rejecting emotionally unacceptable feelings & attributing to another person, object or situation through projection  
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Blaming or Scapegoating is used as which coping mechanism   projection  
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Compensation   make up for deficits in one area by excelling an another to raise/maintain self-esteem  
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Reaction-formation (overcompensation)   unacceptable feelings or behaviors are kept out of awareness by developing the opposite behavior or emotion  
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Denial   escaping unpleasant realities by ignoring their existence  
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Identification   unconscious mechanism used to protect individual against anxiety & loss by imitation of mannerisms or behaviors of a person or group  
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Anxiety assessment   Unmet needs and expectation (individual often unaware), Level of anxiety, Relief behaviors, Circumstances  
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Mild to Moderate Anxiety goals include   Prevent further escalation of anxiety, Reduction of anxiety, Facilitate effective problem solving  
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Severe/Panic level of anxiety goals   Center on physical safety – protection from aggressive drives & physical neglect, Lower level of anxiety is crucial, Interventions are different, Simple, clear words  
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Situational   death, divorce, hospitalization  
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Maturational   pregnancy, adolescence  
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Pathophysiological   Secondary anxiety – anxiety due to physical disease  
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