Therapy
in sentence
428 examples of Therapy in a sentence
Having visited a
therapy
group, Bob and Carol Sanders (Robert Culp and Natalie Wood) have become more open about their sexuality, and are identifying more with the counterculture in general.
Writer/Director (and Wes Anderson collaborator) Noah Baumbach presents a semi-autobiographical
therapy
session where he unleashes the anguish and turmoil that has carried over from his childhood.
The rest of the film is filled with Walt's blatant plagiarism, a non-stop stream of offensive cursing, arguments, premature ejaculation, Bernard allowing his dinner guests at restaurants to only order half-orders because he's so cheap, unbelievable
therapy
sessions, Bernard trying to force his female student and border to perform oral sex only to be interrupted by his son, and a medical emergency that is offered as redemption but fails.
This is an honest, funny view of what happens when Liam Neeson's character, a former DEA golden-boy, starts getting job-related panic attacks... Add Oliver Platt as a high-strung gangster with marital problems, Jose Zuniga as a secretly-homosexual drug lord, and group therapy, and the result is GUNSHY, a smart, wicked, sweet, fast, and funny look at the modern gangster flick.
Dyan Cannon creates some magic with her bitchy, uptight Alice: memorable, seemingly improvised
therapy
scenes where the character's awkward communication skills are highlighted ring very true-as does her frustration near the end when she tries to initiate the orgy.
A doctor researching "frozen
therapy"
seeks out Boris Karloff, the
therapy'
s originator.
This filmmaker is out to lunch ...
therapy
and then a good dose of reality.
Brian (Donovan Leitch) has just been released from a mental institution where he had extensive electroshock
therapy.
One choice was shock
therapy
- quick privatization of state-owned assets and abrupt liberalization of trade, prices, and capital flows - while the other was gradual market liberalization to allow for the rule of law to be established at the same time.
Today, there is a broad consensus that shock therapy, at least at the level of microeconomic reforms, failed, and that countries (Hungary, Poland, and Slovenia) that took the gradualist approach to privatization and the reconstruction of institutional infrastructure managed their transitions far better than those that tried to leapfrog into a laissez-faire economy.
This record suggests that one should think twice before trying shock
therapy
again.
But the Bush administration, backed by a few handpicked Iraqis, is pushing Iraq towards an even more radical form of shock
therapy
than was pursued in the former Soviet world.
Indeed, shock
therapy'
s advocates argue that its failures were due not to excessive speed - too much shock and not enough
therapy
- but to insufficient shock.
If Iraq's economy falters as a result of a misguided economic reconstruction program based on shock therapy, the country will be further indebted with little to show for it.
The emotional debates over “shock therapy” vs. gradualism have been replaced by a broad consensus that, while we need to exploit windows of political opportunity, not everything can be done at once, and reversal is always a threat.
The Polish government that launched the initial “shock therapy” reforms was replaced by a coalition with a “gradualist” bent and greater concern for distributional outcomes.
"I feel like myself again on Paxil," says the woman in advertisements for that antidepressant; so, supposedly, do users of Prozac, Ritalin, Botox, Propecia, Xenical, anabolic steroids, cosmetic surgery, hormone replacement therapy, and sex-reassignment surgery.
But aggressive follow-up
therapy
will be required to prevent the remaining Al Qaeda cells from metastasizing by acquiring more adherents who believe in violence to achieve the 'purification' and empowerment of Islam.
Mindful of a long history of failed attempts at economic “shock therapy,” Macri decided to fix the fiscal mess he inherited only gradually.
Funders and policymakers who keep up with the relevant research are slowly beginning to introduce more talking therapies (such as cognitive
therapy
and trauma-focused counseling), more alternatives to hospitalization, more culturally appropriate services, more family-focused
therapy
and, most importantly, more genuine consultation with service users about what actually works.
Illness and
therapy
began at the same time.
They announced that the
therapy
they were testing, an antiretroviral drug called Truvada, had proved effective enough to end the randomized phases of the trials, and that they were offering the pill to all of the studies’ participants.
Imagine how the medical profession would view one of its members who recommended to the general public some
therapy
that had not yet passed scrutiny from the appropriate authorities.
But despite the paucity of success, the typical goal in cancer
therapy
remains similar to that of antimicrobial treatments – killing as many tumor cells as possible under the assumption that this will, at best, cure the disease and, at worst, keep the patient alive for as long as possible.
Indeed, the parallels between cancerous cells and invasive species suggest that the principles for successful cancer
therapy
might be found not in the magic bullets of microbiology but in the evolutionary dynamics of applied ecology.
Our models show that in the absence of therapy, cancer cells that haven’t evolved resistance will proliferate at the expense of the less-fit resistant cells.
This means that high doses of chemotherapy might actually increase the likelihood of a tumor becoming unresponsive to further
therapy.
New materials will also be necessary to overcome one of the main obstacles to successful gene therapy: the absence of appropriate delivery systems.
Not too long ago, “conversion therapy” for gay or lesbian people – sometimes involving electro-shock procedures – was an accepted medical practice.
Our analysis investigated, for example, the merits of more targeted policies for the near term: purchasing mosquito-resistant bed nets and oral re-hydration malaria
therapy
for children in the poorest nations affected by climate change.
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