PSYCH
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| What is the definition of mental health? | the ability to cope with and adjust to the recurrent stresses of living in an acceptable way
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| What are the 3 factors that influence mental health? | inherited characteristics, childhood nurturing, life circumstances
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| What is the definition of a Mental Illness? | a disturbance in ones ability to cope effectively
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| What is the term for someone who ...has behaviors that interfere with daily activities, impair judgement, or alter reality | the person is said to be mentally ill
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| What were the treatments in primitive society for mental illness (the focus for treatment) | removing evil spirits
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| What physical treatments were used in primitive society for mental illness? | bleeding , massage, blistering, induce vomiting and trephining (cutting holes in the skull)
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| What concept did Greeks introduce? | the idea that mental illness could be rationally explained through observation
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| What was Hippocrates' stand on the role of the physician in dealing with the mentally ill? | to assist in rather than direct the healing process
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| What were Hippocrates' mainstays of treatment for those with mental illness? | proper diet, exercise and personal hygiene
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| What was Hippocrates' view of mental illness? | it was a result of an imbalance of humors, the elements of air fire water and earth
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| How did Plato recognize life? | as a dynamic balance maintained by the soul
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| Where did the rational and irrational sould exist in Plato's theory? | rational resided in the head and irrational resided in the heart and abdomen
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| From 500 to 1100 AD who cared for the sick? | the church
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| Religous ceremonies in which patients were physically punished to drive out evil possessing spirits was referred to as what? | demonical exorcism
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| What is lunacy? | disorder caused by the lunar body
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| What laws were passed in 1130 ? | laws preventing monks from practicing medicine
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| Why were monks kept from practicing medicine? | because it was disruptive to their way of life
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| What killed one quarter of the earth's population in the middle of the fourteenth century? | infectious disease
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| When did documenting of behaviours without bias begin? | in the Sixteenth century
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| Who liberated patients from their chains? | Phillipe Pinel
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| Who established asylums , religious order and humane care in England in the 18th century? | The Quakers
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| When was the Philadelphia almshouse erected? | 1731
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| When did Bellevue Hospital open and where? | 1794 in New York
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| Who was the crusader for the insane in the 19th Century? | Dr. Benjamin Rush
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| What book did Dr Rush write? | Diseases of the Mind
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| What was so significant about Diseases of the Mind? | It was the first psychiatric text written in the US
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| What did Dorothea Dix do ? | she was a school teacher turned surveyor of asylums, jails, and almshouses
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| As a result of Dixs' work what occurred? | public awareness arose, funds were raised and 30 mental hospitals were opened
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| What 2 class system existed by the late 1800s for psych care? | public and private care
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| What book did Clifford Beers write? | A mind that found itself
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| What committee was formed as a result of Beers' work? | The committee for Mental Hygiene (in 1909)
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| What term is Freud known for? | psychoanalysis
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| In a simple term what did Freuds studies and theories revolve around? | sexual energies
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| How did WWI contribute to the mental health movement? | it found soldiers to be deficient thus has Beers develop a master plan for screening soldiers and treating them
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| What was insulin therapy used for? | schizophrenia
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| What was the purpose of the insulin? | to induce a coma
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| What is ECT? | electroconvulsive therapy
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| What was ECT used for? | depression
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| What was a lobotomy? | severing of the frontal lobes of the brain\
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| What did lobotomies do? | eliminated violent behaviors
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| What was the Hill Burton act? | it funded the construction of psych units in the US
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| What did congress do in 1946? | pass the National Mental Health Act
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| What did the National Mental Health Act of 1946 do? | provided funding for programs in research, training and expansion of facilities
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| What does the term deinstituionalization mean? | releasing persons into the community
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| What did the Action for Mental Health motivate JFK to do? | appoint a special committee to study problems of mental illness
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| When were 75% of institutionalized mentally ill persons released into the community | around 1965 after the Medicare/Medicaid Bill of 1965
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| What did the omnibus of 1981 do? | gave designated amounts of money for mental health spending to each state to spend as they chose
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| What did OBRA 1987 do for the mentally ill? | discharged them to the streets because the act would not allow nursing homes or LT care facilities to house them
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| What type of healthcare system does Norway have? | a national insurance system
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| How is Canada's healthcare system divided? | into curative and preventative
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| Is mental healthcare part of Britain's healthcare package? | yes
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| How is Austrailias healthcare system divided? | it is a mix, public, private, and national private
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| What is fee for service? | patients can choose any healthcare provider and do not require a referral
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| What is a PPO>? | a network of physicians hospitals and clinics that agree to provide care for different organizations at a discount
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| What is the third party ? | an insurance company or State or Federal government
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| What is POS? | point of service
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| What is an HMO? | healthcare provided to enrolees at a fixed price, care is within the system
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| How many hours a day does inpatient refer to? | 24 hours a day
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| What is the advantage of inpatient care? | it provides safety and security to the patient
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| What is outpatient care? | care delivered within home environment those that remain in the community
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| What is the "bandaid" theory with outpatient care? | the patients wait until major problem occur and treatments are only for the presenting complaint and overlook the whole problem
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| What is case management? | holistic system of interventions, it supports the transition of mentally ill clients
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| What is consultation | process in which a specialist identifies ways to work effectively with client problems
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| What do advocates in mental health do? | protect clients rights and clarify expectations
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| Who is in a multidisciplinary team? | psychiatrist, psychologist, nurse and social worker (there may be more)
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| What problems occur in those with HIV/AIDS with regards to mental health? | they may have organic problems, impairments in memory, judgment, concentration, progression to dementia
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| What is an attitude? | ideas that help shape our points of view
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| What is a belief? | a conviction that is intellectually accepted as true
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| What is a moral? | they reflectones attitudes, beliefs and values, that define right and wrong
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| How are values transmitted? | modeling, moralizing, laissez-faire, reward/punishment, responsible choice (table 3-1 page 19)
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| What is a right? | power, privilege, existence to which one has just claim
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| What are the 3 steps to values clarification? | Choosing, Prizing, Acting
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| What does every care provider have the right to? | function within a safe environment
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| What are ethics? | concepts that form the basis for professional codes
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| What is nonmalfecience? | Do no harm, Justice and Fidelity
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| What is a criminal law? | division of public law
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| Which is more serious a felony or misdemeanor? | felony
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| What is a tort law? | a law that relates to individual rights and includes need for being compensated for a wrong
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| What is a nurse practice act? | It defines the limit and scope of practice within the state you are practicing
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| What is a standard of practice? | set of guidelines within specific healthcare discipline that are a set of guidelines that provide measureable criteria for nurses clients and others (see appendix A)
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| What is liability? | the care provider is legally repsonsible for their professional obligation
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| What is an involuntary admission? | it is initiated by someone other than the client
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| How long can an involuntary admission last? | days to years
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| How many physicians assess the client on involuntary admission? | 2
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| What is fraud? | giving false information knowing that action will be taken based on that information
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| What is defamation?> | false communication that results in harm
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| What is libel? | written defamation
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| What is slander? | verbal defamation
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| What is assault? | any act that threatens a client , no physical contact need occur
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| What is battery? | when touching occurs without the clients permission
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| How do you avoid battery? | make sure you communicate your actions prior to doing them and receiving consents
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| What is false imprisonment? | detaining a person agains his will
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| What is negligence? | omission or commission of an act that a resonable and prudent person would not do
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| What is malpractice? | failure to exercise an accepted degree of professional skill that results in injury, loss, or damage
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| What are the 4 criteria for negligence? | owed duty, did not carry out the duty, injury as a result, actual loss or damage
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| What is informed consent? | agreement between the client and caregiver
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| What is elopement? | running away from the facility
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| What is duty to warn? | to report certain instances that harm or death may occur
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| What is race? | group of people who share distinct physical characteristics
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| What is ethnicity? | social term associated with customs, cultural habits, socialization patterns
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| What is spirituality? | a belief in a power greater than any human being
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| What is religion? | defined organized and practiced system of worship
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| What is a norm? | established rules of conduct that define which behaviors are encouraged, accepted, tolerated and forbideen within a culture
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| What is a role? | expected pattern of behaviors associatedd with a certain position status or gender
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| What is a stereotype? | oversimplified mental picutre of a cultural group
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| What is a prejudice? | extreme form of negative stereotyping
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| What are the 7 characteristics of culture? | learned, transmitted, shared, integrated, contains ideal and real components, continuously evolving, individual behavior not necessarily representative of the culture
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| What is the difference between a disease and an illness? | a disease is a condition with physical dysfunction and an illness includes social, emotional and intellectual dysfunctions
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| What is a nuclear family? | consists of father, mother and children
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| Who is the extended family referring to? | aunts uncles grandparents, cousins, godparents
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| What are gender roles? | expected behavioral patterns based on gender
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| What was Darwin' stheory of evolution? | natural selection, superior creatures evolved
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| What were the 3 interacting structures that Freud is known for? | the id, ego and super ego
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| What is the id? | site for early childhood experiences, subconcious, self preservation, reproduction, association with others
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| What is the ego? | part of the mind in active awareness, the conscious
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| What is the superego? | last to develop, 2 parts- the conscience which punishes through guilt and anxiety and the 'ego ideal' which reward with feelings of satisfaction and well being
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| What is the libidinal energy? | the need to seek sexual pleasure
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| What are defense mechanisms? | psychological tools to help lessen negative feelings
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| What is compensation defense? | attempt to overcome feelings of inferiority or make up for deficiency
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| What is conversion? | channeling of unbearable anxieties into body signs and symptoms
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| What is denial? | refusal to acknowlege conflict and thus escape the reality of the situation
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| What is displacement? | redirecting of energies to another person or object
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| What is dissociation? | separation of emotions from a situation
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| What is fantasy? | distortion of of unacceptable wishes
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| What is identification defense? | taking on of personal characteristics of admired person to conceal own feelings of inadequacy
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| What is intellectualization? | focusing of attention on techinical or logical aspects of threatening situation
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| What is isolation? | separation of feelings from content to cope unemotionally with topics that would normally be overwhelming
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| What is projection? | putting of ones own accepatable thoughts wishes emotions onto others
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| What is rationalization? | use of agood (but not real) reason to explain behavior to make unacceptable motivation more acceptable
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| What is reaction formation? | prevention of expression of threatening material by engaging in behaviors that are directly opposite to repressed material
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| What is regression? | coping with present conflict stress by returning to earlier more secure stage of life
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| What is restitution? | givng back to resolve guilt feelings
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| What is sublimation? | unconscious channeling of unacceptable behaviors into constructive more socially approved areas
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| What is substitution? | disguising of motivations by replacing inappropriate behavior with one that is more acceptable
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| What is suppression? | removal of conflict by removing anxiety from the conciousness
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| What is symbolization? | use of an unrelated object to represent hidden idea
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| What is undoing? | inappropriate behavior that is followed by acts to take away or reverse acton and decrease guilt and anxiety
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| What is Erikson known for? | describing the life cycle in 8 stages
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| What did BF Skinner state with regards to objective psychology | only observed behaviors in current situations were open to analysis
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| Who developed the operant conditioning theory | Skinner
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| What is Gestalt therapy | accepted the notion of unresolved past conflicts
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| Who pioneered reality therapy? | William Glasser
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| What is Homeostasis and who first considered this theory? | tendency of the body to achieve and maintain steady internal state, Walter Cannon
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| How did Selye define a stressor | nonspecific response of the body to any demand placed on it
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Created by:
Kelly Quijano
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