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Dyscopia

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Patients who are likely to be labelled with one of these terms are sometimes frail and elderly or people with long-term disabilities. Their failure to cope is often a result of inadequate social support coupled with a deterioration of functional capability which is not clearly linked to an obvious or
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A possible controversy associated with using dyscopia and acopia as diagnoses could arise when wrongfully applied to those who have genuine problems with mobility; genuine medical conditions may be overlooked. Investigation of symptoms is a legitimate reason for admission, and if medical staff are
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Sometimes, however, despite the fact that terms such as acopia and social admission can be considered tongue-in-cheek by those adhering to the strictest of medical and psychiatric terminology, they can frequently describe a range of "symptoms", such as extreme lability and emotionality when demands
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The words have also been used in medical notes as a cryptic indication that certain members of a seriously ill patient's family are not coping with the situation and should be afforded some extra consideration for their feelings when the case is being discussed.
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too swift to dismiss concerns by use of such informal labels, genuine symptoms may not be taken seriously and investigated. This may lead to treatable conditions being overlooked, and in turn, result in compromised quality of life and unnecessary suffering.
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shorthand notation for patients who, after being examined and found to have no specific medical condition, are deemed to be not coping with certain aspects of their lives, and are presumed to be seeking treatment as a
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are not met and the unwillingness of a minority of patients that might be encountered in psychiatry, to function and make ends meet, despite the fact that such patients might be lucid and able-bodied.
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Dyscopia (and likewise acopia), in this context, is not generally used by the medical community for fear of insulting the patient and bringing the caregiver's professional standing into question.
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An affected individual will exhibit difficulty with copying simple line drawings. This is often accompanied to lesser or greater degree by difficulty with writing and other fine motor skills.
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The use of the term has become sufficiently commonplace in medical notes that a recent publication of a psychiatric dictionary even cites it as an actual diagnosis.
353:"‘Acopia’ and ‘social admission’ are not diagnoses: why older people deserve better" Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 2008: 101: 168–174 414: 335: 180:
over trivial events or circumstances. This may well assist in demystifying the term and discouraging its usage in medical circles.
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Acopia has been adopted as the name of a company based in Crawley, UK, presumably referring the correct Latin root of the word
139:" or "crumblie" have been used in medical notes synonymously with dyscopia or acopia as a reason for hospital admission. 65: 96:. More recently, and controversially, the term has been used in this context as a diagnosis for admission to hospital. 409: 116:, a neurosurgical procedure in which the left and right hemispheres of the brain are separated by severing the 404: 222: 372: 200: 306: 120:. This procedure has been shown to reduce the frequency and severity of seizures in extreme cases of 253: 84:", is mistaken to mean the same, although this is not a medical term and has no basis in Latin. 281:"THE OTHER SIDE OF THE BRAIN I : DYSGRAPHIA AND DYSCOPIA FOLLOWING CEREBRAL COMMISSUROTOMY" 108:
In neurology, the word "dyscopia" is used to describe a condition which is common as one of the
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Terms such as "social admission", "atypical presentation", and even the derogatory terms "
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The term "dyscopia" has also made its way into general medical parlance as a
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This word has assumed two meanings, both of which are essentially a
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based on the phonic similarity of the words "copy" and "cope" with
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The words also appear to be gaining traction in common usage as
81: 254:"Welcome to Dyscopia : What does the word dyscopia mean?" 31: 46:, which means "bad", "abnormal", "difficult" or "impaired". 257: 307:"Some Long Term Effects of Cerebral Commissurotomy in Man" 243:
Journal of altered states of consciousness, Volume 4
130: 278: 195: 193: 396: 190: 349: 347: 223:"Word Information - search results for: dys" 329: 327: 246: 146:specific medical or psychiatric pathology. 94:form of comfort from the medical profession 344: 64:, dyscopia is used to describe a type of 324: 38:, which means abundance or plenty (see 14: 397: 415:Mental disorders due to brain damage 103: 160: 66:developmental coordination disorder 24: 25: 426: 362:Campbell's Psychiatric Dictionary 283:. Its.caltech.edu. Archived from 375:. Azureblues.com. Archived from 131:As 'not coping' in medical usage 365: 356: 299: 272: 256:. Dyscopia.com. Archived from 237: 215: 13: 1: 183: 80:. Sometimes a similar word, " 7: 10: 431: 373:"Acopia - The AzureBlues" 410:Stress-related disorders 42:), and the Greek prefix 338:March 7, 2010, at the 279:JOSEPH E. BOGEN, M.D. 405:Medical terminology 260:on 17 December 2014 169:meaning abundance. 176:meaning emotional 312:. People.uncw.edu 203:. Archives.nd.edu 104:As dystranscribia 16:(Redirected from 422: 389: 388: 386: 384: 369: 363: 360: 354: 351: 342: 331: 322: 321: 319: 317: 311: 303: 297: 296: 294: 292: 276: 270: 269: 267: 265: 250: 244: 241: 235: 234: 232: 230: 219: 213: 212: 210: 208: 197: 161:Colloquial usage 60:In the field of 30:consists of the 21: 430: 429: 425: 424: 423: 421: 420: 419: 395: 394: 393: 392: 382: 380: 371: 370: 366: 361: 357: 352: 345: 340:Wayback Machine 332: 325: 315: 313: 309: 305: 304: 300: 290: 288: 287:on 3 March 2016 277: 273: 263: 261: 252: 251: 247: 242: 238: 228: 226: 225:. Wordinfo.info 221: 220: 216: 206: 204: 199: 198: 191: 186: 163: 133: 118:corpus callosum 106: 89:tongue-in-cheek 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 428: 418: 417: 412: 407: 391: 390: 379:on 8 July 2012 364: 355: 343: 323: 298: 271: 245: 236: 214: 188: 187: 185: 182: 174:colloquialisms 162: 159: 132: 129: 105: 102: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 427: 416: 413: 411: 408: 406: 403: 402: 400: 378: 374: 368: 359: 350: 348: 341: 337: 334: 330: 328: 308: 302: 286: 282: 275: 259: 255: 249: 240: 224: 218: 202: 196: 194: 189: 181: 179: 175: 170: 168: 158: 155: 151: 147: 143: 140: 138: 128: 125: 123: 119: 115: 114:commisurotomy 111: 101: 97: 95: 90: 85: 83: 79: 75: 71: 67: 63: 58: 56: 52: 51:play on words 47: 45: 41: 37: 33: 29: 19: 381:. Retrieved 377:the original 367: 358: 314:. Retrieved 301: 289:. Retrieved 285:the original 274: 262:. Retrieved 258:the original 248: 239: 227:. Retrieved 217: 205:. Retrieved 171: 166: 164: 156: 152: 148: 144: 141: 134: 126: 112:of cerebral 107: 98: 86: 59: 54: 48: 43: 35: 27: 26: 383:30 December 316:30 December 291:30 December 264:30 December 229:30 December 207:30 December 137:bed blocker 68:related to 399:Categories 184:References 74:dysgraphia 40:cornucopia 62:neurology 336:Archived 201:"Cop ia" 178:lability 122:epilepsy 110:sequelae 70:dyslexia 28:Dyscopia 82:acopia 78:coping 18:Acopia 310:(PDF) 167:copia 55:copia 36:copia 34:root 32:Latin 385:2014 318:2014 293:2014 266:2014 231:2014 209:2014 72:and 44:dys- 401:: 346:^ 326:^ 192:^ 124:. 57:. 387:. 320:. 295:. 268:. 233:. 211:. 20:)

Index

Acopia
Latin
cornucopia
play on words
neurology
developmental coordination disorder
dyslexia
dysgraphia
coping
acopia
tongue-in-cheek
form of comfort from the medical profession
sequelae
commisurotomy
corpus callosum
epilepsy
bed blocker
colloquialisms
lability


"Cop ia"
"Word Information - search results for: dys"
"Welcome to Dyscopia : What does the word dyscopia mean?"
the original
"THE OTHER SIDE OF THE BRAIN I : DYSGRAPHIA AND DYSCOPIA FOLLOWING CEREBRAL COMMISSUROTOMY"
the original
"Some Long Term Effects of Cerebral Commissurotomy in Man"

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