Sunday, July 6, 2008

Gonorrhea In Women Imagenes

Psychosocial aspects

"A close family relationship or partnership preserved but apparently not before major conflicts with a live organ donation, as the experiences of recent years. When close relatives, such as parent-child or sibling constellations, stress can be caused by unfulfilled expectations of the donor on the outcome of the transplant and the "functioning "the recipient in everyday life or the unfulfilled desire to manage a relationship with the organ donation crisis or rising in the family hierarchy. Such psychodynamic developments would often only years later revealed and then only if there is a relationship of trust to the doctor and ask this then, the experience of gripping Higher. An analysis of 68 mostly related living donor-recipient pairs at the University Hospital in Mainz, shows that: In nine of the 43 realized transplants gave it to the organ transplant serious mental health problems " Siegmund-Schultze, Nicola. Organ Donation: Transplantation Medicine in the balancing act Dtsch Arztebl 2007, 104 (44) www.aerzteblatt.de/v4/archiv/artikel.asp?src=suche&id=57405

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"You should also consider your psychological health after donation. For example, some living donors on LDO report feeling depressed after donation. This feeling may be the result of fatigue following surgery, renewed demands on you by family and work while you are still recovering , or the sudden letdown (Abnahme) following a major life event that had been marked by lots of energy, anxiety (Ängstlichkeit), and attention (Aufmerksamkeit) from others. A medical research study showed that nearly 11% of living donors were prescribed anti-depressants (Antidepressiva) following donation.

Your mood (Stimmung/Laune) can also be influenced by what happens to the recipient (Empfänger) of your donated kidney. The recipient may reject the organ or may die despite the transplant. It's natural to go through a grieving process in this circumstance. A perspective on coping with the problems your recipient may endure can be found on this web page: http://www.lodap.com/id31.html If your feelings of sadness persist, please get professional help.

If you donated to a spouse, family member, or friend, the nature of your relationship with that person may change in a negative way. You or the recipient may feel guilt, indebtedness, conflict, or regret and experience manipulation and other destructive behavior. Seek professional counseling if your relationship becomes dysfunctional. Fortunately, most living donors report a great improvement in their relationship with the recipient and family members after the donation." http://www.livingdonorsonline.org/kidney/kidney6.htm

Psychosocial Consequences of Donation

There is limited research on the psychosocial impact of donation immediately following donation surgery. However, LDO participants who have donated report these kinds of psychosocial and relationship changes:

  • An increase in self-esteem for having done something extraordinary for someone else.

  • Positive feelings after seeing the improved health of the recipient.

  • A mild depression, perhaps because attention and concern tends to shift to the recipient after the donation and because of a lower level of anticipation and excitement than the level that preceded the surgery.

  • A change--sometimes positive and sometimes negative--in the relationship with the recipient, family members, and others close to the donor and recipient

  • http://www.livingdonorsonline.org/kidney/kidney5.htm

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