Thursday, 5 October 2023

Samos Syndrome, Women with Borderline Personality Disorder and Risk for Sexually Transmitted Infections and HIV: Their Role During Pandemics | Chapter 2 | Current Innovations in Disease and Health Research Vol. 7

 The author (CL) found the Samos Syndrome when researchers investigated reason certain crowd refuse to take precautionary measures even when aware of universal risks. Samos Syndrome suggests that universal and primary prevention can only happen if people care about staying athletic and avoiding able to be contracted illnesses. When faced accompanying risky inherited diseases, individuals either uphold themselves or welcome them. This last is what takes place in Samos Syndrome. The syndrome is a kind of pathophilia (crowd attracted by illnesses). As inexact personality disorder, in the direction of Samos Syndrome, becomes more common, so will crowd who scrap primary protection from spreading diseases and health behaviour as their choice. Therefore, we cannot halt universal outbursts. Pandemics would sinisterly draw pathophilies and split individuals the one wish to avoid sickness from remainder of something who would waves the risk caused by pandemics to harm themselves for private, interpersonal, and mental reasons.

Author(s) Details:

Carlo Lazzari,
International Centre for Healthcare and Medical Education, London, United Kingdom.

Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/CIDHR-V7/article/view/12040

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