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luhivqqcherry:

health class questions . A doctor hypothesizes the patient is sick but the patient does not. He is convinced by the patient and does not take tests. However, she is indeed sick. What type of error is this? How is malingering different from Munchausen Syndrome? A person has family members who smoke and they never got lung cancer, so he keeps smoking. Which as aspect of the HBM may play a role in this decision? In the famous Rosenhan study, showed us that doctors may often call healthy people "sick". Which illness was falsely diagnosed for most pseudopatients? In the key study of Brudvik et al., three sets of pain data were compared for three types of people. Who were they?

Coyote:

Munchausen Syndrome is when people purposely hurt themselves to get attention.

Coyote:

I feel like that statement should give you enough to figure it out, correct? If not I can further help you.

carlosbigbain:

1. The type of error in the scenario you described is a false negative or a Type II error. The doctor incorrectly concluded that the patient was not sick when they actually were. 2. Malingering and Munchausen Syndrome are both conditions that involve deceptive behavior related to health. Malingering refers to intentionally faking or exaggerating symptoms for personal gain, while Munchausen Syndrome is a psychological disorder where individuals fake or induce symptoms to gain attention or sympathy. 3. The Health Belief Model (HBM) suggests that perceived susceptibility to a health condition plays a role in decision-making. In the scenario you mentioned, the person may believe that because their family members didn't get lung cancer despite smoking, they are not susceptible to it, leading them to continue smoking. 4. In the famous Rosenhan study, the pseudopatients were falsely diagnosed with schizophrenia. The study aimed to examine the reliability of psychiatric diagnoses. 5. In the key study by Brudvik et al., three sets of pain data were compared for three types of people. Unfortunately, I don't have access to the specific details of that study.

luhivqqcherry:

@coyote wrote:
I feel like that statement should give you enough to figure it out, correct? If not I can further help you.
The question is asking the difference between malingering and munchason sydrome .

5StarFab:

I'm going to tell you what i think you could do.Read it and analyze the text cause it gives part of the answer in one of the sentences you got to find it.

5StarFab:

@luhivqqcherry wrote:
@coyote wrote:
I feel like that statement should give you enough to figure it out, correct? If not I can further help you.
The question is asking the difference between malingering and munchason sydrome .
let me do some research and i will guide you on what to do.

luhivqqcherry:

@carlosbigbain wrote:
1. The type of error in the scenario you described is a false negative or a Type II error. The doctor incorrectly concluded that the patient was not sick when they actually were. 2. Malingering and Munchausen Syndrome are both conditions that involve deceptive behavior related to health. Malingering refers to intentionally faking or exaggerating symptoms for personal gain, while Munchausen Syndrome is a psychological disorder where individuals fake or induce symptoms to gain attention or sympathy. 3. The Health Belief Model (HBM) suggests that perceived susceptibility to a health condition plays a role in decision-making. In the scenario you mentioned, the person may believe that because their family members didn't get lung cancer despite smoking, they are not susceptible to it, leading them to continue smoking. 4. In the famous Rosenhan study, the pseudopatients were falsely diagnosed with schizophrenia. The study aimed to examine the reliability of psychiatric diagnoses. 5. In the key study by Brudvik et al., three sets of pain data were compared for three types of people. Unfortunately, I don't have access to the specific details of that study.
they can decet ai content and they sent it back to me 😭 .

Coyote:

@luhivqqcherry wrote:
@coyote wrote:
I feel like that statement should give you enough to figure it out, correct? If not I can further help you.
The question is asking the difference between malingering and munchason sydrome .
Find out what malingering syndrome is?

5StarFab:

ik what both of which means

carlosbigbain:

@luhivqqcherry wrote:
@carlosbigbain wrote:
1. The type of error in the scenario you described is a false negative or a Type II error. The doctor incorrectly concluded that the patient was not sick when they actually were. 2. Malingering and Munchausen Syndrome are both conditions that involve deceptive behavior related to health. Malingering refers to intentionally faking or exaggerating symptoms for personal gain, while Munchausen Syndrome is a psychological disorder where individuals fake or induce symptoms to gain attention or sympathy. 3. The Health Belief Model (HBM) suggests that perceived susceptibility to a health condition plays a role in decision-making. In the scenario you mentioned, the person may believe that because their family members didn't get lung cancer despite smoking, they are not susceptible to it, leading them to continue smoking. 4. In the famous Rosenhan study, the pseudopatients were falsely diagnosed with schizophrenia. The study aimed to examine the reliability of psychiatric diagnoses. 5. In the key study by Brudvik et al., three sets of pain data were compared for three types of people. Unfortunately, I don't have access to the specific details of that study.
they can decet ai content and they sent it back to me 😭 .
not this kind

5StarFab:

@carlosbigbain wrote:
@luhivqqcherry wrote:
@carlosbigbain wrote:
1. The type of error in the scenario you described is a false negative or a Type II error. The doctor incorrectly concluded that the patient was not sick when they actually were. 2. Malingering and Munchausen Syndrome are both conditions that involve deceptive behavior related to health. Malingering refers to intentionally faking or exaggerating symptoms for personal gain, while Munchausen Syndrome is a psychological disorder where individuals fake or induce symptoms to gain attention or sympathy. 3. The Health Belief Model (HBM) suggests that perceived susceptibility to a health condition plays a role in decision-making. In the scenario you mentioned, the person may believe that because their family members didn't get lung cancer despite smoking, they are not susceptible to it, leading them to continue smoking. 4. In the famous Rosenhan study, the pseudopatients were falsely diagnosed with schizophrenia. The study aimed to examine the reliability of psychiatric diagnoses. 5. In the key study by Brudvik et al., three sets of pain data were compared for three types of people. Unfortunately, I don't have access to the specific details of that study.
they can decet ai content and they sent it back to me 😭 .
not this kind
No matter what you use the ai detects it.And cherry's school is too strict so of course they have ai text detectors

carlosbigbain:

so does mine i do FLVS and not only ai detectors but also detects if you copied from another website and scans all other students work to see if you got answers from them

5StarFab:

@carlosbigbain wrote:
so does mine i do FLVS and not only ai detectors but also detects if you copied from another website and scans all other students work to see if you got answers from them
So why were you saying the school wouldn't detect it?

luhivqqcherry:

@carlosbigbain wrote:
so does mine i do FLVS and not only ai detectors but also detects if you copied from another website and scans all other students work to see if you got answers from them
bro samee .

5StarFab:

And my school has that stuff turned off

carlosbigbain:

because even tho my school has all that its not detected

luhivqqcherry:

when i used ur answers and sent it in they sent it back and said ai content decected .

5StarFab:

@luhivqqcherry wrote:
when i used ur answers and sent it in they sent it back and said ai content decected .
bro what

5StarFab:

dude did you misspell anything cause if you misspell it and used auto corrector it counts as an ai.

5StarFab:

i found that out when i scanned my story

carlosbigbain:

intresting

carlosbigbain:

theres another website you can you to make anything sound more human like

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