Mind-body therapies/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz (New page: {{subpages}} ==Parent topics== {{r|Psychology}} {{r|Healing Arts}} {{r|Psychotherapy}} ==Subtopics== {{r|Art therapy}} {{r|Cognitive behavioral therapy}} {{r|Dance therapy}} {{r|Emotion...) |
Pat Palmer (talk | contribs) m (Text replacement - "{{r|Psychoneuroimmunology}}" to "") |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
{{r|Energy medicine}} | {{r|Energy medicine}} | ||
{{r|Therapeutic touch}} | {{r|Therapeutic touch}} | ||
==Articles related by keyphrases (Bot populated)== | |||
{{r|Psychotherapy}} | |||
{{r|Chiropractic}} | |||
{{r|Physiological stress}} |
Latest revision as of 12:46, 28 November 2024
- See also changes related to Mind-body therapies, or pages that link to Mind-body therapies or to this page or whose text contains "Mind-body therapies".
Parent topics
- Psychology [r]: The study of systemic properties of the brain and their relation to behaviour. [e]
- Healing Arts [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Psychotherapy [r]: An intervention or insight technique that relies on communication between a therapist and a client(s) to address specific forms of diagnosable mental illness, or everyday problems [e]
Subtopics
- Art therapy [r]: The medical use of visual or tactile art, used in conjunction with psychotherapy to help express events that may be difficult to articulate, and with rehabilitative medicine to improve coordination and, when approriate, assist a client with artistic training to adapt techniques to physical limitations [e]
- Cognitive behavioral therapy [r]: A psychotherapeutic technique based on assisting the patient to learn the interpretation of (cognitive structure of experiences that trigger behavior, and, if that behavior is maladaptive, to change the response to the experience [e]
- Dance therapy [r]: The use of dance and other movement techniques to improve health, dealing with emotional or neurologic problems [e]
- Emotional Freedom Techniques [r]: A psychotherapeutic tool developed by Gary Craig, aimed at solving emotional, health and performance issues. [e]
- Eye Motion Desensitization Reprocessing [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Hypnosis [r]: A presumed altered state of consciousness in which the hypnotized individual is usually more susceptible to suggestion than in his or her normal state. [e]
- Music therapy [r]: The planned and creative use of music to attain and maintain health and well being. [e]
- Relaxation techniques (complementary medicine) [r]: Methods, using the mind, body or both, to reduce physiological or psychological stress [e]
- Spiritual therapies [r]: Mystical, religious or spiritual practices performed for health benefit. [e]
- Yoga [r]: An entire (Indian) philosophy of being, with the goal of achieving peace of mind and of body, which also includes a set of exercises and breathing techniques to induce relaxation. [e]
- Anthroposophy [r]: A holistic extension to conventional medicine, emphasizing the spiritual, and using art and movement, as well as herbal remedies, especially mistletoe [e]
- Energy medicine [r]: Techniques in complementary and alternative medicine that involve either the unconventional use of electromagnetic fields, or of biological energies not detectable by conventional instrumentations, to maintain or improve health [e]
- Therapeutic touch [r]: A form of energy healing, performed by a therapist positioning hands over the patient's body, and sensing and adjusting energy fields [e]
- Psychotherapy [r]: An intervention or insight technique that relies on communication between a therapist and a client(s) to address specific forms of diagnosable mental illness, or everyday problems [e]
- Chiropractic [r]: A complementary, alternative health-care profession that aims to heal using manual therapies on the spine and extremities. [e]
- Physiological stress [r]: Biological consequences of the failure of an organism to respond appropriately to emotional or physical threats to its being, whether actual or imagined. [e]