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Some Related Sentences

Psychologically and with
Psychologically, it involves a person empathizing with others.
Psychologically Goldfinger is warped, possibly because of an inferiority complex brought on by his shortness, in contrast to a number of Fleming's other over-sized villains and physically he is odd, with a lack of proportion to his body.
Psychologically, a person with macropsia may feel separation and dissociation from the outside world and even from immediate family.
Psychologically these events marked the end of the British Empire, and with it the central thread of popular imperial unity which had bolstered the Scottish Unionist Party until then.

Psychologically and .
Psychologically the reception should be the climax, following the sermon.
Psychologically, the DMT experience can be overly-intense, potentially causing overwhelming fear and difficulty integrating experiences if one is not mentally prepared.
Psychologically, a person's urge can be repressed or sublimated.
The Psychologically Healthy Workplace Program ( PHWP ) is a collaborative effort between the American Psychological Association and the APA Practice Organization designed to help employers optimize employee well-being and organizational performance.
The PHWP includes APA ’ s Psychologically Healthy Workplace Awards, a variety of APA Practice Organization resources, including PHWP Web content, e-newsletter, podcast and blog, and support of local programs currently implemented by 52 state, provincial and territorial psychological associations as a mechanism for driving grassroots change in local business communities.
( 1 ) Psychologically: the capitalists would not repent and turn towards communist on their own ; ( 2 ) the rulers must be overthrown by the people ; ( 3 ) " the proletarians are discontented, and a demand for communism has arisen and had already become a fact.
Psychologically, bedroom closets are the center of many childhood fears.
Psychologically, foreplay lowers inhibitions and increases emotional intimacy between partners.
* Braid, J., " Electro-Biological Phenomena Physiologically and Psychologically Considered, by James Braid, M. R. C. S.
Psychologically, though, the filming was difficult.
Psychologically this is seen by some to convey a fond celebration of the deceased rather than the traditional solemnity.
Psychologically, she observed the " herd instinct ", or the tendency to work and socialize in groups, as well as the powers of reason and imagination.
Psychologically, intervals cause audiences to return to reality, and are a period during which they can engage critical faculties that they have suspended during the performance itself.
Psychologically, it is possible to become habituated to a degree of stimulation, and then find it uncomfortable to have significantly more or less.
Psychologically, the visual stimulus being looked upon by the child is being imitated faster than the imitation of the command.
Psychologically, the presence of the US Navy ’ s amphibious assault force prompted rumours, nation-wide, that the US Marines already had established a beachhead in Honduras, and were en route to invading Guatemala.
Psychologically damaged from their near-death battle, the two warriors are intense, but refuse to speak.
Psychologically, however, homeless women in their fifties suffer from troubles and chronic diseases from which their housed counterparts only begin to suffer in their seventies.

supportive and enable
The supportive infrastructure, processes and databases of the organisation that enable human capital to function.

supportive and patients
Analysis of MPI results by Turk and Rudy ( 1988 ) found three classes of chronic pain patient: "( a ) dysfunctional, people who perceived the severity of their pain to be high, reported that pain interfered with much of their lives, reported a higher degree of psychological distress caused by pain, and reported low levels of activity ; ( b ) interpersonally distressed, people with a common perception that significant others were not very supportive of their pain problems ; and ( c ) adaptive copers, patients who reported high levels of social support, relatively low levels of pain and perceived interference, and relatively high levels of activity.
Initially, treatment is similar to that for patients with thermal burns, and continued care can only be supportive ( e. g. intravenous fluids and nasogastric or parenteral feeding ) and symptomatic ( e. g., analgesic mouth rinse for mouth ulcer ).
In patients who are very sick, supportive treatment, such as mechanical ventilation, is equally important.
However, in the past 50 years, the proportion of patients with botulism who die has fallen from about 50 % to 7 % due to improved supportive care.
Most infant botulism patients require supportive care in a hospital setting.
" Based on his findings, Fink suggests that, " Instead of endorsing these reports as the direct consequence of ECT, especially in patients who have recovered from their depressive illness, lost their suicidal drive, and have improved social functioning, is it not more useful to accept the complaint as a somatoform disorder, explore the basis in the individual's history and experience, and offer appropriate supportive treatment?
Most patients with uncomplicated measles will recover with rest and supportive treatment.
As such the townspeople became very supportive of the patients at the Queen Victoria Hospital.
As of 2005, multiple trials show objective tumor responses and slowed tumor progression but questionable survival benefit compared to supportive care ; greatest benefit seen in patients with preserved liver function, absence of vascular invasion, and smallest tumors.
Group drug counseling was designed to educate patients about the stages of recovery from addiction, to strongly encourage participation in 12-step programs, and to provide a supportive group atmosphere for initiating abstinence and an alternative lifestyle.
Interventions may include connecting patients and families to necessary resources and supports in the community ; providing psychotherapy, supportive counseling, or grief counseling ; or helping a patient to expand and strengthen their network of social supports.
The NCI coordinates the U. S. National Cancer Program and conducts and supports research, training, health information dissemination, and other activities related to the causes, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of cancer ; the supportive care of cancer patients and their families ; and cancer survivorship.
The recently released preliminary abstract of a large clinical trial of patients with relapsed GBM showed that treatment with the Novo-TTF device was no better than best supportive care in prolonging survival.
Treatment consists of supportive care for the massive fluid accumulation in the patients body (= oedema ) and as well as steroids to halt the disease process ( typically prednisone 1 mg / kg ).
In 1986, Henderson took a highly public stance against the Liberal government in its attempt to ban extra-billing by doctors, a practice by which physicians bill patients directly an amount in addition to what is provided by the provincial health plan, and was generally supportive of doctors in their illegal strike that followed.
Medical management of VHF patients may require intensive supportive care.
Prometheus was proven to be a safe supportive therapy for patients with liver failure.
The organization provides information about the unique signs / symptoms of this deadly and deceptive disease, and information about the chemotherapy, surgery, and radiotherapy that most patients receive, and patients ' encouraging stories, an informative forum, a supportive e-mail list, a dictionary of applicable cancer terms and abbreviations, and much more.

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