Glossary / Lexicon
Co-therapy
Co-therapy is a term used that occurs when two (2) or more clinicians/therapists work directly together. Common examples of Co-Theraphy include group, couples, or family therapy conducted by a pair of therapists/clinicians.
Related Articles | |
Korovai | ■■■ |
Korovai refers to Ukrainian type of wedding bread that is decorated with designs representing eternity . . . Read More | |
Food Trivia: Loaf as wedding symbol | ■■■ |
Food Trivia: Loaf as wedding symbol : in Bulgaria, during the wedding reception, the groom’s mother . . . Read More | |
Neutrality at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■ |
Neutrality refers to a term used to describe the therapist's ability to maintain an objective viewpoint . . . Read More | |
Externalizing the problem at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■ |
Externalizing the problem means making the problem the opponent, not the child or family. Hence, "removing . . . Read More | |
Multisystemic treatment (MST) at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■ |
Multisystemic treatment: Multisystemic treatment (MST) is defined as an approach to treatment that attempts . . . Read More | |
Mimesis at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■ |
Mimesis refers to the process by which a therapist appears similar to family members by imitating body . . . Read More | |
Pretherapy change at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■ |
Pretherapy change refers to a change that takes place before the client arrives at the Therapist’s . . . Read More | |
Prompts at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■ |
Prompts are cues that convey a message and remind people to do something In psychology, prompts refer . . . Read More | |
Proficiency at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■ |
Proficiency in the context of psychology refers to an individual's advanced level of skill, expertise, . . . Read More | |
Occupational therapists at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■ |
Occupational therapists refer to trained and licensed individuals who work with emotionally and/or physically . . . Read More |