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nataly862011 [7]
2 years ago
11

The cluster approach to categorizing personality disorders is based on ____________.

Health
1 answer:
vagabundo [1.1K]2 years ago
6 0

The cluster approach to categorizing personality disorders is based on resemblance.

<h3>What is a personality disorder?</h3>

A personality disorder is a mental health illness marked by persistent, pervasive, disruptive patterns of thought, behaviour, mood, and interpersonal interaction. These behaviours significantly disturb the individual and/or limit their capacity to operate. Our personalities play a big part in shaping who we are as people. It involves a special fusion of characteristics, such as attitudes, beliefs, and behaviours, as well as how we show these characteristics in our relationships with other people and the outside world. Personality disorders can result in abnormal behaviour, false perceptions of reality, and misery in all areas of life, such as work, relationships, and social interaction.

To know more about personality disorders, visit:

brainly.com/question/27291111

#SPJ4

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Procedure of autologous transfusion​
Alenkasestr [34]

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This is the banking of red cell units from the patient before planned surgery.

PAD was stimulated by concerns about viral transmission by donor blood, especially during the HIV epidemic of the early 1980s. With a red cell storage-life of 35 days at 4°C, most healthy adult patients can donate up to three red cell units before elective surgery. Patients may be given iron supplements, sometimes with erythropoietin, to prevent anaemia or allow more donations to be collected. The Blood Safety and Quality Regulations (BSQR, 2005) require that donations for PAD must be performed in a licensed blood establishment, rather than a routine hospital setting. The donations must be processed and tested in the same way as donor blood and are subject to the same requirements for traceability.

Given the current remote risk of viral transfusion-transmitted infection by donor blood in developed countries, the rationale, safety and cost-effectiveness of routine PAD has been severely questioned (see 2007 British Committee for Standards in Haematology (BCSH) Guidelines for Policies on Alternatives to Allogeneic Blood Transfusion. 1. Predeposit Autologous Blood Donation and Transfusion – https://b-s-h.org.uk) and the procedure is now rarely performed in the UK. Although PAD may reduce exposure to donor blood, it does not reduce overall exposure to transfusion procedures or protect against wrong blood into patient episodes due to identification errors at collection from the blood bank or at the bedside. Indeed, the availability of autologous blood may increase the risk of unnecessary transfusion. Most Jehovah’s Witnesses will decline PAD (see Chapter 12). Clinical trials of PAD are mainly small and of low quality and do not provide strong evidence that the risks outweigh the benefits. The BCSH guideline on PAD only recommends its use in ‘exceptional circumstances’, and lists the following indications for PAD:

Patients with rare blood groups or multiple blood group antibodies where compatible allogeneic (donor) blood is difficult to obtain.

Patients at serious psychiatric risk because of anxiety about exposure to donor blood.

Patients who refuse to consent to donor blood transfusion but will accept PAD.

Children undergoing scoliosis surgery (in practice, most specialist units now use other blood conservation measures).

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