Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Men's Health surveyed American male gun owners on their mental health. The results range from anger, fear, violence, connection, tradition, protection, safety.
This term can be applied to any stress reaction in the military unit environment. Many reactions look like symptoms of mental illness (such as panic, extreme anxiety, depression, and hallucinations), but they are only transient reactions to the traumatic stress of combat and the cumulative stresses of military operations. [1]
Linda Blackford: After two political assassination attempts, a school shooting in Georgia and an attempted mass murder on I-75, Kentucky and the nation must do something.
Americans own about 400 million guns — with the lack of registration and a thriving black market, we don’t even have an accurate accounting. The restrictions could, however, deprive some law ...
Various people who describe themselves as undergoing electronic harassment have committed crimes, notably including a number of mass shootings.. Fuaed Abdo Ahmed, a 20-year-old man, held a man and two women hostage at the Tensas State Bank in St. Joseph, Louisiana on August 13, 2013, eventually killing two of the hostages and himself.
A 2015 review found that in the United States, about 4% of violence is attributable to people diagnosed with mental illness, [239] and a 2014 study found that 7.5% of crimes committed by mentally ill people were directly related to the symptoms of their mental illness. [240] The majority of people with serious mental illness are never violent ...
The Senate voted Wednesday to nullify part of a gun control bill that keeps severely mentally ill people from buying guns.
Intermittent explosive disorder (IED), or episodic dyscontrol syndrome (EDS), is a mental and behavioral disorder characterized by explosive outbursts of anger or violence, often to the point of rage, that are disproportionate to the situation at hand (e.g., impulsive shouting, screaming, or excessive reprimanding triggered by relatively inconsequential events).