YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Feminist Perspective on Occupational Therapy
Essays 721 - 750
In six pages the uses of recreational art therapies and benefits for those individuals that are either suffering from a traumatic ...
In eight pages this paper discusses sexual offenders as featured in a literature review that includes such issues as child molesta...
In two pages this paper discusses the U.S. President's request for a memo to be written to urge Congress not to cut from Medicaid ...
In twelve pages this paper considers various substance abuse programs including group, family system, and individual therapies as ...
In nine pages this research paper discusses therapy, counseling, and how computers are being used with a consideration of such pra...
This paper looks at research into students with emotional and behavioral problems, and consider which sort of interventions have b...
emotional, physical and mental care. Dogs establish a fierce loyalty to their human families in a very short amount of time; bond...
In a paper consisting of ten pages the arguments surrounding adjuvant therapies and lumpectomies over radical or partial mastectom...
or a loved one; these fears often present themselves as disturbing thoughts (Definition of obsessive-compulsive disorder, 2002). T...
In five pages this paper discusses the psychotherapy theories of Masters and Johnson, Helen Singer Kaplan, and Sigmund Freud to se...
The writer examines the Helen Singer-Kaplan book The New Sex Therapy Active Treatment of Sexual Dysfunction, and argues that the b...
the cancer-fighting benefits of dietary vitamin supplementation. Studies have shown that such vitamins as C, E and beta carotene ...
In fifteen pages Dr. Wright's Book of Nutritional Therapy is discussed in terms of its premise, case studies, and the data it pres...
that precedes the first episode of psychosis in schizophrenia is referred to as the "preprodromal period...and the prodrome" and i...
could impede progress in therapy (Martin, 2011). Beck coined the term cognitive therapy. As the theory evolved, it was soon appa...
the structural and relational factors, including patterns of poor communication, Gils work issues, and problematic financial issue...
in the presence of bullying activities (Young, 1998). It is not uncommon for schools to take a crisis intervention approa...
In a paper ten pages in length, the writer takes the point of view of a counselor after the first session with a client, and refle...
station is situated just before the facility branches into two main hallways, along either side of which are situated the twelve e...
activities have been created as a part of therapeutic play; a process of introducing play activities through which children can pr...
stressors that are present at any given time are more than can be mitigated for through the general adaptations and minor changes ...
(Milner, 2005). The therapist asks the client what they think would help them with this particular problem and will often rely on ...
ones life (Mulhauser, 2011). The first reaction, that is, normal grief, leads to sadness, which is a perfectly healthy, normal par...
were more cooperative in non-directive sessions but in most cases, the degree of directiveness did not affect the clients cooperat...
goodness no matter what. While Job never gives up that faith, he does have moments when he might like to give up. Job tells his w...
telling Helen and Manny do not know where she is. They have a conflicting opinions about Derek as well. Derek has a part-time jo...
parents" and this factor has tremendous influence on whether or not a child feels safe and secure (Gewitz and Edleson, 2004, p. 3)...
Furthermore, the researchers pointed out, pain, depression and insomnia among this sample were "strong predictors" of CAM usage (E...
that Scheela supervised, she heard the gruesome details of the abuse that one member of the group endured as a child, as well as t...
("Three stages," 2011, p. 1465). Mild cognitive impairment characterizes the second stage of AD ("Three stages," 2011). The thre...