en.aazsante.fr

The Largest Portal Of Health And Quality Of Life.

Suarez's cases can be characterized as psychiatric illness when there are recurring patterns

Suarez's cases can be characterized as psychiatric illness when there are recurring patterns

Uruguayan soccer player Luis Suárez was penalized by FIFA for not playing for nine games of the Federation and was banned for four months of any activity related to football after the episode in which the Italian opponent Giorgio Chiellini bit the World Cup game on June 24. A recurring behavior, which has been repeated twice in the last four years of his career.

In moments of strong emotion or in the "heat of passion" the human being may have irrational behaviors that we call "short circuit" . The pressure is so intense or the stress is so strong that there is no time for reflection on the acts, hence we speak of short or unthinking acts. This can happen to anyone. Hence came a legally used term for passionate crimes, carried out in the "heat of passion," which are not currently criminal extenuating.

But people without psychiatric problems have this behavior in extreme situations, and they are relatively rare in life. That is, a pathology can be understood from the repetitions of this behavior and the intensity. If a person exhibits this type of recurring behavior, we may think that it may have some sort of problem, but the classification varies according to a number of factors.

Competition athletes have an "explosion" ability that, when well-directed, makes them win titles and break records.

There are adults with alterations in precisely the brain areas responsible for both impulsivity and aggression, as well as in other areas that are responsible for controlling or managing this aggressiveness or impulsivity. some of which are pathological. One of them is impulse disorder, in which people present a picture characterized by the marked tendency to act impulsively without due consideration of the consequences. In addition, emotional or emotional instability is present. In this disorder, the person still has attacks of anger and behavioral explosions, especially when their acts are criticized or prevented by other people. Impulse disorders are understood as a type of personality disorder.

Violence in sports

We must remember that competition athletes have an "explosion" ability that, when well directed, makes them win titles and break records . In certain sports, this explosion allows for even violence, as in certain fights that currently hit public records like MMA and other fights. But even they have rules and the bite is not allowed. Boxing, the "noble art", is also a fight of "controlled" violence, but it has already made victims like the great Muhammad Ali and recently our Maguila.

Football is no different: we found two teams, one of each side, as in medieval times, and instead of swords and spears there is the ball and the beams. There are also the boot locks on the opponents leg, elbows, unfair entrances; but "biting", as in other sports, is outside the rules of the "contained violence" of the sport.

It seems that the public needs to vent their own contained violence by watching and frantically twisting with each stroke, with each fall, the more blood , and this sometimes ends up turning football stadiums into real warplanes with real victims.

Is there a treatment?

As in medicine, and especially in neurosciences, all pathologies are multicausal - they can never be reduced. to a single cause - in the treatment a multiprofessional team is needed, covering professionals in the area of ​​psychiatry, psychology, neurology, and even religious counseling.And punishment will not always be the best solution. If the cause is organic (a trauma or malfunction of a particular brain system), a punishment will hardly change the person's behavior. Making a metaphor, it's no use punishing a computer that has a defective "program"!


Do you know where you want to go?

Do you know where you want to go?

There are many people who are constantly lost. You do not have the slightest idea of ​​what you want, but you know you are not fulfilled with the current situation. The way out is to set goals and goals. But how, if we do not know what we want? Research shows that less than 3% of the population have specific personal or professional goals and approximately 1% of the population puts their goal on paper.

(Well-being)

Set your TV room to watch the games of the cup

Set your TV room to watch the games of the cup

The TV room turns the stands with Brazil on the field in the World Cup. Family and friends get together trying to find the best position to watch the games. On the one hand, the atmosphere of relaxation and adrenaline lead the crowd to delirium and make the day even more pleasant, on the other, sits, rises and getting dressed to try to watch games can cause body aches and, if your room is not adapted to take in so many people and for long exposure to television, the situation can get even worse.

(Well-being)