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Psychopharmacology
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Psychopharmacology sits at the intersection of medicine, neuroscience, and psychology, examining how drugs affect the brain and behavior. Students encounter it in courses ranging from abnormal psychology and psychiatry to pharmacology and public health. The field is academically compelling because it connects biological mechanisms directly to clinical outcomes, raising questions about how chemical interventions alter mood, cognition, and perception. Papers in this area frequently address specific conditions such as paranoid schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and post-traumatic stress disorder, treating drug therapy as both a scientific and an ethical subject worth rigorous analysis.

The papers archived under this topic reflect several distinct approaches. Many take a clinical case-study angle, examining how treatments including antidepressants, SSRIs, and medications such as Paxil are applied to specific psychiatric diagnoses and what side effects patients experience. Others adopt a policy or classification lens, analyzing how schedule drugs and Schedule I drug designations shape what treatments are legally available. Some papers are more theoretical, exploring psychodynamic frameworks alongside pharmacological ones, or investigating how the immune system and nervous system interact to inform treatment decisions. Memoir and literary analysis also appear, with works like Kay Redfield Jamison's An Unquiet Mind used to humanize clinical concepts.

A strong essay on psychopharmacology requires a focused thesis that commits to one condition, drug class, or policy question rather than surveying the entire field. Evidence drawn from peer-reviewed journals and documented patient outcomes carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating symptom management with cure — strong essays maintain that distinction carefully and acknowledge the complexity of measuring treatment effectiveness across diverse patient populations.

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Paper Undergraduate
Schizophrenia: History and Causation
Schizophrenia is a serious mental illness. Understanding it can be difficult, and treatment is often complicated. Since there is no cure and no way to prevent the disease, learning to manage it once it has manifested itself is all people with this illness can do. There are also biblical issues to address when it comes to mental illness, which are discussed in this paper.
Essay Doctorate
Genetic Influence of MDMA Neurotoxicity MDMA Neurotoxicity
Ecstasy (MDMA) is a popular drug that produces significant adverse effects, including neurotoxicity. The mechanisms underlying MDMA-induced neurotoxicity have been suggested to be due to the genetic variability in how well the drug is metabolized in the liver. Accordingly, loss of function cytochrome P450 (CYP2D6) alleles contribute to elevated serum levels of MDMA. Locally, MDMA probably increases the release of serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine, the sustained exposure of nerve endings to these catecholamines, and in the presence of the met/met variant of catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) could contribute to the accumulation of catechol reactive oxygen species. Whether this represents the mechanism for MDMA-induced neurotoxicity will have to await the findings of future research studies.
Paper Undergraduate
Processing Effects of Cognitive and Emotional Psychotherapy on Bipolar Disorder
Bipolar disorder, originally called manic depressive disorder, is a severe mood disorder that vacillates between extreme "ups" (mania, hypomania) and "downs" (depression). The effects of having bipolar disorder can be observed across the patients social and occupational functioning. Often the patient is left isolated from work, friends, and family. Medications have become the first-line treatments for bipolar disorder; however, psychotherapy can offer additional benefits in the ongoing treatment of patients with bipolar disorder. This paper discusses the symptoms and treatment of bipolar disorder focusing on cognitive behavioral therapy and emotion focused therapy.
Essay Doctorate
History of the relationship between biology and psychology
Biological applications are being used in the study of mental process and behavior in term of mechanisms of body that is the study of psychology. The thinking that psychological processes are biologically related to…
Research Paper Doctorate
History concepts and development
In many ways, the history of psychology can be said to have come 'full circle,' from its early attributions of human behavior to purely biological causes, to psychoanalysis' stress upon the relationship of the mind's…
Paper Doctorate
Personal essay: themes and reflections
admissions first laid eyes on the Physician's Desk Reference when I volunteered at a pharmacy in Iran when I was in high school there. Although I was born in Norfolk, Virginia, my family and I moved to Iran when I was…
Paper Undergraduate
Life Experience of Personal Care Assistants in Anchorage Cross-Cultural Caring of Older Adults
The increase in racial and ethnic diversity in the United States and specifically in Anchorage Alaska and the compelling evidence of ethnic health disparities (Smedley, Stith and Nelson, 2002) makes the incorporation of ethnogeriatric perspective into the practice of geriatric health care of critical importance. Reported are the "federally designated racial and ethnic groups…[of]…"American Indian/Alaska Native, African American/Black, Asian American, Native Hawaiian Pacific Islander, Hispanic/Latino American, and white/Caucasian American…" (McBride, 2012, p.1) Also reported are "vast differences or heterogeneity…found between and within these categories related to health beliefs and practices, access and utilization of health care, health risks, family dynamics and caregiving, decision making process and priorities, and response to interventions and changes in health care policies." (McBride & Lewis, 2004; McBride, Morioka-Douglas, & Yeo, 1996; McCabe & Cuellar, 1994; Richardson, 1996; Villa, Cuellar, & Yeo, 1993; Yeo, McCabe, Talamantes, Henderson, Scott, & Yee, 1996 in: McBride, 2012, p.1) Additionally reported is that the heterogeneity within each of the categories of ethnic/racial minority older persons such as sociodemographic characteristics, modes of social interaction and communication, health and healing belief systems, learning behaviors, and certain values and traditions…" all of which "contribute degrees of complexity to the delivery of culturally sensitive health care." (Yeo, McCabe, Henderson, Talamantes, Scott & Yee, 1996 in: McBride, 2012, p.1) The study reported in this work is a qualitative phenomenological research study that examines the experiences of personal care assistants in Anchorage, Alaska.
Research Paper Doctorate
ADHD Assessment of Children by School Nurse
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder presents itself in many different ways for many different people. It is further complicated by the fact that there are three types of ADHD recognized by the DSM-IV and even…
Paper Masters
Designer Babies the Idea of the Designer
The idea of the designer baby used to be an idea that belonged squarely in the field of science fiction. Choosing characteristics of offspring from gender to appearance was something out of Star Trek.
Research Paper Doctorate
Cocaine Botanical Origins Cocaine Is Synthesized From
Cocaine is synthesized from the leaves of the coca plant. These plants grow in Bolivia, Peru, Columbia, Africa, Taiwan, Indonesia, and Formosa. The leaf contains between 0.5% and 1.5% cocaine and the processing methods…