Terms beginning with "J"

Many misunderstandings in the depiction of people with mental illnesses have arisen from misunderstanding of the vocabulary of mental illnesses, or inaccuracies in that vocabulary’s use. The following glossary has been developed from The American Psychiatric Association’s Psychiatric Glossary and a list prepared by the Mental Health Association in Los Angeles County, of preferred and misunderstood terms used to describe mental illnesses. The glossary contains examples of both proper language and language that perpetuates misunderstanding and stigma.

Those marked with an asterisk (*) are examples of outmoded, inaccurate and stigmatizing language.

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P S V W

Jekyll-and-Hyde

Often equated with split personality and incorrectly identified as a symptom of schizophrenia. The reference to split personality more accurately describes someone who has “multiple personality disorder.”

Jung, Carl (1875-1961)

A Swiss psychotherapist and founder of the school of analytical psychology, which postulates a collective unconscious of mankind.

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