Ethical and Cultural Issues Arising from the Psychology of Terrorism- 3 Credit Hrs.
instant CE certificate!
Homestudycredit Home
Pricing and Content
CE Approvals
Order Form
CE Regulations
Instructors
Question?

Healthcare Training Institute - Quality Education since 1979
Psychologist, Social Worker, Counselor, & MFT!

BBC - Diagnosis & Treatment of Male Depression Post Test

Audio Transcript Questions The answer to Question 1 is found in Track 1 of the Course Content. The Answer to Question 2 is found in Track 2 of the Course Content... and so on. Select correct answer from below. Place letter on the blank line before the corresponding question.
Important Note! Underlined numbers below are links to that Section. If you leave this page, use your "Back" button to return to your answers, rather than clicking on a new "Answer Booklet" link. Or use Ctrl-N to open a new window and use a separate window to review content.

Please note every section does not have an additional question below. Some sections may have more than one question.

Questions:

1.1 What are some ways that men masquerade their depression and their resulting shame?
2.1 What is an alternate method of refocusing a client’s attention in the “Shame Release Technique"?
3.1 What is a “shame through silent response”?
4.1 What method requires the client to redefine the way they interacted and change his behavior whenever someone, such as a father, shames him?
5.1 What are some cognitive keys for shame?
6.1 What are three options that an ashamed man has after he confronts his past and the possible wrongs that his parents have committed against him?
8.1 Guilt and shame have different origins. What is the origin of shame?
8.2 Why is guilt more specific than shame?
Answers:

A. Client could close his eyes, unless he was walking or had to perform some task, helping him relax without having to watch himself in his surroundings
B. Drinking, lashing out at others, and subvert relationships
C. Redefining relationships
D. When men begin to feel ashamed by being ignored
E. They can seek revenge against their victimizer, they can hold a grudge against their victimizer and remain silent, and lastly they can forgive.
F. Being inarticulate, feeling helpless in trying to explain himself, experiencing the panicky awareness of having his mind “go blank”, noticing when somebody else is using shaming rules on him, and noticing when he is using the shaming rules on either himself or somebody else
G. When one feels guilty, usually he can trace it to an event or incident. Shame, however, is indeterminate and unspecifiable.
H. Shame tends to be learned from the mother early in life because either her approval of her son causes him to feel pride in his entire being or her disapproval of her son causes him to feel ashamed of his entire self.

Course Content Manual Questions The answer to Question 9 is found in Section 9 of the Course Content. The Answer to Question 10 is found in Section 10 of the Course Content... and so on. Select correct answer from below. Place letter on the blank line before the corresponding question

Please note every section does not have an additional question below. Some sections may have more than one question.

Questions:

9.1 What three forms of anticipating and predicting the future stir up a maelstrom of unsettling emotions which all too often become self-fulfilling prophecies?
10.1 What are some distinct advantages that an unknown caller has by using the telephone in treatment for depression?
12.1 Why should the staff of inpatient units restrict the use of body search to patients at high risk for suicide and use room searches instead?
14.1 According to therapist Terrence Real, what is “toxic masculinity”?
15.1 What are the four different phases in the anger cycle?
15.2 In the anger cycle, what is the definition of fantasy?
16.1 According to family researching, what major factor determines how involved a man will be with their children?
16.2 What are some forms of maternal gatekeeping?
18.1 How does Dr. Tom Lue describe MANopause?
18.2 What are common symptoms of MANopause?
Answers:

A. The caller is placed in control and can remain anonymous if he chooses, the counselor is also anonymous and the sense of distance helps some people feel more at ease and able to talk freely, self-esteem can be saved in the eyes of some individuals if they are talking to a stranger who cannot see them.
B. Expecting the worst, expecting the impossible, and telling yourself that you “can’t”
C. Chronic anger wears and tears on psychological and physical resources, leaving little energy for giving out love, little room for taking in love, and a little motivation for making love. It interferes with avenues of stress reduction.
D. It is intrusive and potentially humiliating or stimulating to vulnerable patients whereas room searches can be done with less concern and is one way that staff can demonstrate their rigor and commitment to safety
E. A way of planning or premeditating your anger act by seeing in your mind the way you want to act out.
F. Pretends to be normal phase, build-up phase, anger acting-out phase, and downward spiral (defense mechanisms) phase.
G. Women view men as inherently incompetent when it comes to parenting or care giving and women resent men’s intrusion on the traditional feminine turf of mothering and restrict men’s access.
H. Men’s satisfaction with their marital relationships
I. Irritability, a feeling of sluggishness, and mild to moderate mood swings.
J. A “male middle-life slowdown”. He notes that almost all parts of the male body and metabolism slow down during the midfities to the late sixties before they stabilize and a normal rate of attrition resumes.