To treat people
To treat people
To treat people
An anxiety disorder, depression, and ADHD. The therapy helps your brain erase how it reacts to certain things (in a negative way) and retrains it to cope using methods given, (in a positive way)! For me, it helped me gain my confidence back, not overreact about the small problems, not feel so overwhelmed by everything you have to do daily! It seriously tricks your brain, but in a good way!
There are absolutely ways to treat depression without drugs or hospitalization. The most effective method would be any number of varying therapies, including cognitive behavioral therapy.
"Pathological lying" is a symptom and not a diagnosable disorder in and of itself. The symptom might bring you down one of any number of paths diagnostically. In general, Cognitive/Behavioral Therapy, Reality Therapy or Dialectic Behavioral Therapy may be of some help. These are not the only possibilities. Med's would not have any effect on the symptom, but med's might be useful with whatever underlying disorders might be operating, depending on what they might be.
A psychotherapist who employs a combination of cognitive-behavioral and humanistic interventions and medication in conjunction with lifestyle modifications would be referred to as eclectic.
Common treatments for mental illness are psychotherapy, cognitive therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy, group therapy, psychodynamic therapy, psychoanalysis, and the administration of psychotropic medications.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and medication. If you're all hardcore about not using medication, ask yourself if you would treat bipolar disorder with medication? If the answer is yes, you would certainly do the same for ADD. They are neurological disorders, not behavioral or psychological. You can't train the brain to increase the stimulation of the gland between the two hemispheres of the brain. Don't put someone through therapy if you're not going to offer the medication in addition. It can do more harm than good, long-term.
Most colleges require some kind of liberal arts curriculum no matter what your major is. Once you get to grad school, where you would focus on behavioral therapy, they don't have those requirements.
Cognitive-behavior therapy (CBT) would be good for treating a range of psychological issues such as anxiety disorders, depression, phobias, and post-traumatic stress disorder. It can also be effective for managing stress, improving self-esteem, and treating obsessive-compulsive disorder. The structured and goal-oriented approach of CBT helps individuals identify and change negative thought patterns and behaviors contributing to their difficulties.
A psychologist using the behavioral approach to therapy would likely focus on identifying and changing specific behaviors through techniques such as reinforcement, shaping, and modeling. They may use tools like exposure therapy, systematic desensitization, or operant conditioning to address clients' maladaptive behaviors and help them develop healthier coping strategies.
Your question doesn't tell the disorder and it is clear this is an essay question from a text book or test. You need to answer this question. We don't do essays for students nor do we do homework. If you are going into education you need to be able to answer this question. If you can't you have a problem.