healing arts

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Across
  1. 5. embodies the power of creativity to instigate change.
  2. 10. Picker Institute, Includes 8 dimensions for hospital-based care and can apply to ambulatory settings : 1) respect for the patient's values, preferences, and expressed needs 2)info and education 3) access to care 4) emotional support to relieve fear and anxiety 5) involvement of friends and family 6) continuity and secure transition between health care settings 7) physical comfort 8) coordination of care.
  3. 12. Medical definition: An activity directed at or performed on an individual with the object of improving health, treating disease or injury, or making an assessment and/or diagnosis.
  4. 14. Carries signals that return those systems to their standard activity levels and regulates the "rest and digest" functions.
  5. 17. Specialized medical care for people living with a serious illness. This type of care is focused on providing relief from the symptoms and stress of the illness. The goal is to improve quality of life for both the patient and the family.
  6. 18. __ art therapies: follows the medical model of assessment, diagnosis, prescription and intended outcome.
Down
  1. 1. Carries signals that put the body's systems on alert It prepares the body for strenuous physical activity and responsible for the flight or flight response.
  2. 2. is the human experience of the effort to recover, it is what the patient brings to the encounter with the disease of illness and with mainstream medicine.
  3. 3. is the human experience of the disease.
  4. 4. Refers to the period after loss during which grief and mourning occur; it is the state of having experienced a loss. Bereavement is a form of depression which usually resolves spontaneously over time. The person who is bereaved may experience anxiety, insomnia, inertia, hyperactivity, or a feeling of helplessness.
  5. 6. A practice of deliberate activities initiated and performed by individuals in order to maintain their mental, physical, and spiritual health and wellbeing.
  6. 7. Outward and active expression of grief.
  7. 8. Describes an individual's personal response to loss and has emotional, physical, behavioral, cognitive, social and spiritual dimensions.
  8. 9. Refers tp a wide range of creative and disciplined practices that foster an individual's innate healing potential, thereby promotion health, wellness, coping skills, and personal change.
  9. 11. is defined biomedically.
  10. 13. A characterization of the multidimensional nature of palliative patient's pain experience which imcludes the physical, psychological, social, and spiritual domains. Optimal pain relief is not possible if all dimensions of total pain are not addressed.
  11. 14. is a physiological phenomenon.
  12. 15. is the scientific effort to change what's happening in the body , it is what allopathic mainstream medicine has to offer and is what the physician brings to the patient; for it to work, the biological and psychological healing response of the individual must be functioning.
  13. 16. is the human experience of pain.