Across
- 4. therapy. Rewards and reinforcements help patients successfully learn more healthful behaviors. For example, a therapist may teach you to associate alcohol with an unpleasant memory.
- 5. psychologists. These professionals specialize in treating the problems of schoolchildren, including learning, emotional, and behavioral problems.
- 9. These professionals handle both medical and educational matters. Counselors provide individualized guidance to help students create academic plans, navigate career choices, and address personal challenges. They may or may not have medical training.
- 10. These are medical doctors who can diagnose and treat medical disorders and prescribe medications.
- 12. therapy. Medications may be used on their own or combined with other treatment methods, such as those listed above.
Down
- 1. social workers. These professionals provide guidance and treatment for emotional problems in hospitals, mental health clinics, and family service agencies.
- 2. These physicians specialize in physical disorders of the brain and nervous system.
- 3. therapy. This treatment method is most successful when every member of the family attends the sessions.
- 6. “Talk Therapy”. The dialogue between patient and doctor is designed to root out the cause of a mental problem in order to devise a solution.
- 7. therapy. The doctor or therapist and the patient work together to change harmful thinking patterns. For example, identify the stimulus for stress and work toward confronting managing the stimulus, rather than avoiding it
- 8. therapy. In this type of treatment, group members agree that whatever is said in the group is private. They agree not to reveal any information heard during their group sessions to outsiders.
- 11. psychologists. These professionals diagnose and treat emotional and behavioral disorders through counseling. Although they are not medical doctors, some can still prescribe medicine.
