Hana Zickgraf
Hana Zickgraf
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Відео

Lecture 32 - Substance use disorder - history and biology of substances
Переглядів 7012 роки тому
Lecture 32 - Substance use disorder - history and biology of substances
Lecture 18 - Post traumatic stress disorder
Переглядів 4492 роки тому
Lecture 18 - Post traumatic stress disorder
Lecture 10 - Generalized anxiety disorder & separation anxiety disorder
Переглядів 6172 роки тому
Lecture 10 - Generalized anxiety disorder & separation anxiety disorder
Lecture 9: Social anxiety & selective mutism
Переглядів 8242 роки тому
Lecture 9: Social anxiety & selective mutism
Lecture 19 - Developmental trauma disorders
Переглядів 1,6 тис.2 роки тому
Lecture 19 - Developmental trauma disorders
Lecture 25: Tics & Body-focused repetitive behavior disorders
Переглядів 2912 роки тому
Lecture 25: Tics & Body-focused repetitive behavior disorders
Lecture 26: Pica and Rumination Disorder
Переглядів 8372 роки тому
Lecture 26: Pica and Rumination Disorder
Lecture 1 part 2: Defining psychopathology
Переглядів 1,1 тис.2 роки тому
Lecture 1 part 2: Defining psychopathology
Lecture 1 part 1 - Course format & syllabus review
Переглядів 5172 роки тому
Lecture 1 part 1 - Course format & syllabus review
Lecture 23 part 2. OCD etiology
Переглядів 2652 роки тому
Lecture 23 part 2. OCD etiology
Lecture 13. Predicting and preventing suicide
Переглядів 2473 роки тому
Lecture 13. Predicting and preventing suicide
Lecture 15. Bipolar spectrum disorders
Переглядів 2,2 тис.3 роки тому
Lecture 15. Bipolar spectrum disorders
Lecture 14. Etiology & treatment of depression
Переглядів 4613 роки тому
Lecture 14. Etiology & treatment of depression
Lecture 12: What is and isn't major depressive disorder?
Переглядів 2213 роки тому
Lecture 12: What is and isn't major depressive disorder?
Lecture 5 Part 2 - Diagnosis
Переглядів 1853 роки тому
Lecture 5 Part 2 - Diagnosis
Lecture 3 - CBT 1 - Behaviorism, Neuroanatomy, & Darwinian Medicine
Переглядів 5313 роки тому
Lecture 3 - CBT 1 - Behaviorism, Neuroanatomy, & Darwinian Medicine
Lecture 29 - Etiology of binge eating and bulimia nervosa - why dieting doesn't work
Переглядів 6703 роки тому
Lecture 29 - Etiology of binge eating and bulimia nervosa - why dieting doesn't work
Lecture 24: Hoarding disorder & Body dysmorphic disorder
Переглядів 2763 роки тому
Lecture 24: Hoarding disorder & Body dysmorphic disorder
Lecture 23 part 1: What is OCD
Переглядів 3503 роки тому
Lecture 23 part 1: What is OCD
Lecture 6: Research methods
Переглядів 2143 роки тому
Lecture 6: Research methods
Lecture 8: Panic disorder & agoraphobia
Переглядів 4123 роки тому
Lecture 8: Panic disorder & agoraphobia
Lecture 7: Introduction to anxiety disorders & Specific phobia
Переглядів 1 тис.3 роки тому
Lecture 7: Introduction to anxiety disorders & Specific phobia
Lecture 7 mini-lecture: Designing an exposure hierarchy
Переглядів 1393 роки тому
Lecture 7 mini-lecture: Designing an exposure hierarchy
Lecture 9 mini-lecture: Behavioral experiments
Переглядів 1023 роки тому
Lecture 9 mini-lecture: Behavioral experiments
Lecture 10 mini-lecture: Cognitive restructuring
Переглядів 1893 роки тому
Lecture 10 mini-lecture: Cognitive restructuring
Lecture 11 - Introduction to the mood spectrum & major depressive disorder
Переглядів 2953 роки тому
Lecture 11 - Introduction to the mood spectrum & major depressive disorder
Lecture 5: Assessment & Diagnosis Part 1 - Assessment
Переглядів 2873 роки тому
Lecture 5: Assessment & Diagnosis Part 1 - Assessment
Lecture 4 - CBT 2, Integrative model - biology, environment, and psychology
Переглядів 3203 роки тому
Lecture 4 - CBT 2, Integrative model - biology, environment, and psychology
Lecture 2. History of Abnormal Psychology
Переглядів 8 тис.3 роки тому
Lecture 2. History of Abnormal Psychology

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @brainyboy6487
    @brainyboy6487 Місяць тому

    Lovely lecture, thank you!

  • @SYAgencies0379
    @SYAgencies0379 2 місяці тому

    Correct, it is about releasing the anxiety , and doing the right thing with the thoughts. The hugehr the dimensions, of empathy intelligence. You start to get every spirit , of clean and some unclean come to you. ❤

  • @SYAgencies0379
    @SYAgencies0379 2 місяці тому

    I can say, i never had a thought, of killing or harming my child i can sau that, vut i been recieving thoughts of others hurting me an dmy children, and baby i have, in thoughts. ❤

  • @SYAgencies0379
    @SYAgencies0379 2 місяці тому

    Thank you, i hate, when i do admit or say what i am, everything negative be tied to it by the phyco therapist.

  • @tikomephiri4685
    @tikomephiri4685 3 місяці тому

    20:24

  • @awsomevideos123ify
    @awsomevideos123ify 6 місяців тому

    Loved this video! Thank you so much for sharing this! As someone formally diagnosed with OSDD/DIDNOS your video absolutely clearly identifies factual information on everything you covered!

  • @intrusive-th0t
    @intrusive-th0t 7 місяців тому

    I would like to hear more about the anorexia to orthorexia pipeline. I was diagnosed with anorexia at 17 after suffering from it for about 4 years prior and the main thing that actually made me recover was not treatment but shifting body standards that favored a more thick, muscular build over a thin waifish one. I feel in a way that I still have an anorexic mind but that the diet, idealized body, and compensatory rituals it is fixated on have changed. While my weight is normal, my body fat percentage definitely is not and I have suffered from similar symptoms to anorexia because of it (loss of period, lanugo, chills, fatigue, etc.) I engage in compulsive exercise but without desire for weight loss. It is more out of fear of becoming fat and lazy and a desire for discipline and control. I have many fear foods due to concerns about health and I have suffered from nutrient deficiencies as a result. Whenever I hear that something is healthy or unhealthy my brain latches onto it with sometimes dangerous results. I once got so panicked about the amount of sodium in my food that I accidentally overdosed on potassium supplements. I also suffered from severe dehydration because I heard something about hyponatremia and was afraid that if I drank too much water I would die. I also often struggle to keep weight on and engage in compensatory force feeding to keep my weight up. I have felt dysmorphic about being too skinny and hate how my bones still protrude from my chest due to low body fat. I believe that orthorexia is wrongly characterized as “just extreme healthy eating” when in reality it can be so much more dangerous than that. I wish that it would get its own proper diagnosis and research rather than being lumped in with EDNOS because it’s a common path I see many anorexics go down and often concern disappears the moment we reach a healthy weight…

  • @rodentswithlove7686
    @rodentswithlove7686 7 місяців тому

    Hi. I just wanted u to know that ur lectures have really helped me. I passed my licensure examination for psychometrician last September. Thank you!

  • @uzelok_21
    @uzelok_21 9 місяців тому

    Great lecture🤩

  • @katala2500
    @katala2500 9 місяців тому

    Brilliant lecture but unfortunately the video of the girl recording a "manic" episode is not real.... she's faking it. This isn't a very good depiction of what we are like when manic hahaha 😅 its more of a depiction of BPD (borderline personality disorder)

    • @gSWG3R
      @gSWG3R 7 місяців тому

      Do you have proof that it's fake?

  • @Battleangel731
    @Battleangel731 9 місяців тому

    7:42

  • @___Anakin.Skywalker
    @___Anakin.Skywalker 10 місяців тому

    You're very attractive so I'm glad you're not showing your face so it won't be a distraction to learning LOL

  • @yesisaidit5058
    @yesisaidit5058 10 місяців тому

    Very high yielding lecture, mam! 👏

  • @sarcasticallyyours312
    @sarcasticallyyours312 11 місяців тому

    Lecture is good..but I had to skip it because of lot of audio issues....if possible try to fix it

  • @sadhnadevrani9892
    @sadhnadevrani9892 11 місяців тому

    I m 62 years old lady from 3 months ago i use to eat raw rice to much. I like it very much n i cant able to prevent myself for this .tell me what should i do for avoid this bad habit . My husband n children even my grand daughter is also scold me for this but i cant stop myself .pls help me how can i able to avoid this bad habit

  • @aasiyakhan7715
    @aasiyakhan7715 Рік тому

    Thank you Hana Ma'm for this very useful class ☺☺😄

  • @anabela6142
    @anabela6142 Рік тому

    Great lecture 👍 thank you 🙏 ❤

  • @Adins_Cozy_Crochet
    @Adins_Cozy_Crochet Рік тому

    wish my College would allow professors to put the lectures online. thank you for posting all of the lessons!

  • @lauraliz6782
    @lauraliz6782 Рік тому

    I didn’t find this to be accurate .

  • @dannyngayab5853
    @dannyngayab5853 Рік тому

    Very Helpful and informative discussion Dr. Hana

  • @uzmairshadirshadmashi-hi5oh

    From Pakistan

  • @uzmairshadirshadmashi-hi5oh

    Unipolar depression abut lecture

  • @pleasedontdestroythiseither

    16 38

  • @pleasedontdestroythiseither

    27

  • @pleasedontdestroythiseither

    2 22 30

  • @pleasedontdestroythiseither

    6 22 28

  • @jonathanbrowning5473
    @jonathanbrowning5473 Рік тому

    Solid work. I'm a psychiatrist and always trying to learn more. Really enjoyed the Autonomic Restriction section. Thanks for making this :)

  • @rodentswithlove7686
    @rodentswithlove7686 Рік тому

    Thank you for this 💚

  • @AndrewFulmer
    @AndrewFulmer Рік тому

    This is excellent overall but such a good example of the overwhelming anti-Freudian state of modern training. You make such a big deal of the things that aren't supported by modern science (which, of course, there are, and they should be clearly noted as such) but then don't mention at all how prescient some of the very ideas you mention were, even as you are acknowledging that they form the *basis* of modern developmental psych.

  • @coreykern7604
    @coreykern7604 Рік тому

    Great Job. 👍 Enjoyed your video presentation.

  • @nononouh
    @nononouh Рік тому

    12

  • @CheetahSnowLeopard
    @CheetahSnowLeopard Рік тому

    Assuming adoptees are candidates for both RAD and Disinhibited Social Engagement Disorder. Is this possible? Probable? I seem to line up a fair amount with both.

  • @CheetahSnowLeopard
    @CheetahSnowLeopard Рік тому

    “They may have learned to be loving, outgoing, cute, friendly, and funny…” yes, yes indeed.

  • @elsewherehouse
    @elsewherehouse Рік тому

    Chapter 10 of the Body Keeps the Score is helpful!! (Its available on audible)

  • @peapotfairy
    @peapotfairy Рік тому

    1-2 percent of the population is not a small number. You act like there is no way that there could be 20 differen DID channels on social media but 1-2 percent is also the number of redheads in the global population so... Also if labels help people function with this highly distressing disorder, what is the problem? I use IFS in my healing and have identified and named many of my parts and it has been extremeley helpful in processing my traumas and treating mu cptsd. I imagine that a system who experiences dissociative amnesia would greatly benefit by categorizing and organizing those states. I appreciated a lot of the twchnical information you provided but it was difficult to listen to your judgement of how so many DID systems experience their disorder. What if someone with DID watches your video? What about the system that made the video you showed?! How do you think it would feel to have someone who positions themselves as a mental health authority -- who has no idea who you are, or how you see yourself, or how experience the world -- completely invalidate how you cope with your own disorder. Pretty gross.

    • @natasa9628
      @natasa9628 Рік тому

      Agree. She should do more research. She shoul read more work from R. J. Loewenstein, B. Brand ... and it is not 'only in America' phenomenon (they just made a real circus out of it in USA), it was found and documented all over the world: Africa, Turkey, China ... D.I.D. is coping mechanism (it is childhood trauma + dissociation + fantasy, creativity). This lecture was hard to listen. So much ignorance and bias.

  • @shahilagh
    @shahilagh 2 роки тому

    You should twitters of people and making Your guess diagnosis, do you know anything about research ethics of social media?! I m so bewildered

  • @verushckacizzelle7403
    @verushckacizzelle7403 2 роки тому

    Great examples, in depth explanations. Thank you

  • @austincushing7630
    @austincushing7630 2 роки тому

    Hi Hanna, I may be wrong, but I believe the way you describe lobotomy as it was practiced in the early days of psychiatry and in mental hospitals is slightly incorrect. The procedure you referred to is known as a corpus callosotomy, which is still perform today on severe epileptics, as you mentioned. However, lobotomy refers to the transection of the anterior prefrontal cortex in its entirety, much more invasive and damaging than a corpus callosotomy. Often times physicians performing lobotomy would simply swish the pick around in order to scramble the frontal lobe of patients.

  • @crazyadrian4467
    @crazyadrian4467 2 роки тому

    Ur ability to speak is outstanding

  • @melissaflores6451
    @melissaflores6451 2 роки тому

    Thank you so much for these. I'm attending a web based course, and my professor did not include video lectures. This is really helpful. This is an extremely helpful tool.

  • @moplez1
    @moplez1 2 роки тому

    Hi Dr Zickgraf, thank you for uploading this informative video. I think you are a great teacher because you explain informative in a clear and cogent manner. I'm a therapist and I'm due to start working with a client with excoriation disorder. Please can you recommend any reading information?

  • @daimqadeer299
    @daimqadeer299 2 роки тому

    Subscribed. Nice lecture

  • @shxwtydntcry
    @shxwtydntcry 2 роки тому

    thank you for spreading awareness on Selective Mutism . Everyone needs to have a voice ♡ I also make videos on mental health and Selective Mutism 💕

  • @acjordangaming52
    @acjordangaming52 3 роки тому

    My two favorite professors. This is awesome.