Tag Archives: 분당출장안마

  • -

Lena Dunham admits she ‘didn’t want to live’ during her addiction

Tags : 

Lena Dunham has opened up about her addiction to prescription drugs while recovering from a hysterectomy and being heartbroken over a break-up.

Speaking in the March issue of Cosmopolitan, on sale from January 30, the actress, 33, admitted at one point she ‘didn’t want to live’ as the medication she was taking messed with her brain chemistry.

She said: ‘One day, I looked around and I was lying in a bed in my parents’ apartment under two blankets, in the same pyjamas I’d been in for three days, and I was like, “This isn’t me”. 

Honest: Lena Dunham, 33, has opened up about her addiction to prescription drugs while recovering from a hysterectomy and being heartbroken over a breakup 

‘It wasn’t that I was suicidal. I felt nothing. I didn’t want to live.’ 

Lena spoke about her break-up with musician Jack Antonoff, 35, explaining they fell in love at a young age and had a great time together.

RELATED ARTICLES
Previous

1
Next

Lena Dunham reveals her myriad tattoos as she poses naked in… Beach time or bedtime? Celebrities ring in the brand new… Lena Dunham reflects on her ‘awesomely complex’ year in… Diane Kruger and boyfriend Norman Reedus are rebel chic as…
Share this article
Share 31 shares However, the Girls creator added that the pair were just starting out in their careers at the time and they have managed to remain friends after splitting up.

The TV star added that, 영등포출장안마 although not every second of their relationship has been easy, Lena still considers him a dear friend. 

She said: ‘There are definitely moments where I was catty, rude or sassy, but he has been beautifully accepting of those and I’ve been able to be accepting of his anger too.’ 

Candid: The actress admitted at one point she ‘didn’t want to live’ as the medication she was taking messed with her brain chemistry 

Lena also admitted that she would often party till all hours of the morning while she was filming Girls, explaining she spent her entire twenties jeopardising her health.  

But she has since decided to go sober, saying that sobriety means abstaining from negative relationships as well as not doing drugs.

The actress revealed she has also decided to take a hiatus from dating and has been single for the last 14 months.

She said: ‘I realised that until I was in a dynamic with someone who made me feel super-safe, I didn’t want to do it. People right now will go, “Oh my god, you haven’t had sex in over a year,’ and I’m like, ‘No, actually it’s been the most healing thing.” ‘

Relationships: 강남출장안마 Lena spoke about her breakup with Jack Antonoff, 35, explaining they fell in love at a young age and have remained friends after splitting up (pictured in February 2017) 

While she’s more than happy being single, Lena admitted that if they brought back a revived version of Celebrity Love Island, she would be ‘tempted’ to take part.

The writer added that, although she’s not looking for a relationship, if she were to meet someone who she thinks she could start a family with, it would be great.

However, she said that the last two years have been the best of her life and it would be difficult for someone to ‘knock her down’.

The interview comes after Lena reflected on the past 12 months and what she has learnt from the past year in a candid New Year’s Instagram post. 

The star discussed her ‘awesomely complex’ year and gave her followers a list of life lessons.  

Single: The actress revealed she has also decided to take a hiatus from dating and has been single for the last 14 months (pictured in January 2020) 

She accompanied the post with a snap of herself clad in a lacy pink bra and white briefs as she perched on the edge of her bathtub.

 Accompanying the shot with a lengthy caption, Lena wrote: ‘This year has been complex and awesome and awesomely complex.

‘It’s been the best professional year of my life – not because I’m on a million magazine covers or making gossip waves but because I’m quietly doing what I love with people I love who also love doing it.

Cover girl: Read the full interview in the March issue of Cosmopolitan – on sale 30th January 

‘If I had to distill the year’s lesson: -go slower than you think you should because it ultimately adds up to more. You don’t have to push you can just move ahead with passion. 

‘People will come and go and surprise you and often their rejection is God’s protection (it also sometimes has nothing to do with you).’

‘Sometimes you heal slowly and then all at once -spend Sunday night returning emails and Monday morning returning texts and you’ll feel very accomplished. Be mindful of ‘self-care’ not turning into hiding out- there’s a difference.

‘Say yes more than you want to but no whenever you need to. Surround yourself with people who inspire you and make you laugh and implicitly understand your issues and don’t keep a tally of your wrong doings.

‘It’s okay to take a pause from work to focus on the personal and a pause from the personal to make your art. Be a b***h on a mission don’t make it a mission to be a b***h.’ 

Read the full interview in the March issue of Cosmopolitan – on sale 30th January. 

New Year: The interview comes after Lena reflected on the past 12 months and what she has learnt from the past year in a candid New Year’s Instagram post 

Advertisement Read more:
cosmopolitan.com/uk/LenaDunham


  • -

Future Direction of Health Psychology

Tags : 

id=”mod_42700292″>In a brief essay, explain the comprehensive intervention model and describe your own perspective regarding its appropriateness in light of what you have learned during this course.

According to Health Psychology 5th edition (2016) the comprehensive intervention model is “a model that pools and coordinates the medical and psychological expertise in some well-defined area of medical practice so as to make all available technology and expertise available to a patient; the pain management program is one example of a comprehensive intervention model”. Comprehensive intervention models are typically designed for specific diseases, disorders, and concerted attacks on risk factors. Comprehensive intervention models can take many different shapes, for instance pain management programs where all treatments for pain are organized in one place so that separate pain management regimens can be established for each individual patient (Taylor, 2015, p. 309). Hospice care is also considered to be a comprehensive intervention model because they offer palliative management technologies and psychotherapeutic technologies to terminally ill patients. Residential and outpatient coordinated rehabilitation programs for patients with specific conditions or diseases which help patients with multiple health habits simultaneously are also considered to be a comprehensive intervention model.

Comprehensive intervention models offer the highest quality of care to the patients that they care for. However comprehensive intervention models have begun to fall out of favor due to the high level of cost involved in the models and the treatments. For instance, hospitals have dismantled their pain centers due to a lack of funds to support the pain management strategies and techniques involved in the treatment (Taylor, 2015, p. 310). While hospitals have had to do away with their comprehensive intervention models not all organization have suffered from this dilemma. For instance, hospice is an organization that is able to continue to operate their comprehensive intervention model through the use of outside funding. Hospice receives funding from government programs, private insurance, donations by corporations, grants donated by charitable foundations, and through donations from individuals (Hospice Patients Alliance, 2016). Hospices also receive reimbursement from insurance providers like Medicare, Medicaid, and other private insurance for the care that the hospice provides to the terminally ill patient.

Based on my personal knowledge of health psychology I feel that the comprehensive intervention model is an appropriate patient care model. However I also feel that it needs to evolve and change in order to remain an appropriate treatment model. The comprehensive intervention model focuses on providing the highest quality of care for each patient by compiling information on numerous techniques and treatments; however with the current pressure to reform US health care and contain its costs, the model needs to find a way to provide care while reducing costs. While it is optimal to provide each patient with the highest quality of care it is perhaps better to be able to afford to provide all patients with both quality and affordable care. In order to do this the comprehensive intervention model should consider and attempt less expensive treatment strategies first and move on to the more expensive ones only if the less expensive ones prove to be ineffective. The comprehensive intervention model could work to incorporate the placebo effect into the treatment options. The placebo effect challenges the foundation of modern medicine as it proves that certain treatments are not effective because of their nature, but rather the patient’s belief in their effectiveness. The placebo effect presents the idea of the mind being able to control the body when the patient has a strong enough belief in the outcome that will occur. The comprehensive intervention models could begin patient treatment with placebo treatments and if the placebo proves to be an effective treatment then more expensive treatments could be avoided; this would reduce the cost of the models and allow for the treatment of more patients without the fear of running out of funding.

References

Hospice Patients Alliance. (2016). Hospice Funding: What you Need to Know. Retrieved

website

Taylor, S. (2015). Health Psychology (9th ed.). McGraw-Hill Education.

Taylor, S. (2016). Health Psychology (5th ed.). McGraw-Hill Education. Retrieved

website

Related
Medicine & Health ScienceCare Plan: Nursing Interventions for Acute Pain, NANDA
by Levi3

Psychology & PsychiatryHistorical Perspectives of Psychology: The Behavioral Movement
by Natalie Frank2

Psychology & PsychiatryPsychiatric atrocities: 10 shameful interventions inflicted on the ‘mentally ill’
by Dr. Gary L. Sidley37

Child PsychologyChild Development Theories – Down’s Syndrome and Autism
by Fiona Guy4

Positive PsychologyPositive Psychology and Psychological Suffering
by Charlotte Doyle3

Popular
Psychology & PsychiatryEffects Of Arousal And Anxiety On Sports Performance
by Liam Hallam3

Myers-Briggs Personality TypesMyers Briggs and Twin Flame Theory
by Andrea Lawrence3

Social PsychologyEffects of Insecure Attachment in Childhood on Adult Relationships
by Richard Brown0

Comments
Sign in or sign up and post using a HubPages Network account.

0 of 8192 characters usedPost CommentNo HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked. Comments are not for promoting your articles or other sites.

sendingNo comments yet.

If you cherished this article and you simply would like to collect more info regarding 서울출장안마 generously visit our own web-site.


If you need us then send an e mail.