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psychosocial
[sahy-koh-soh-shuhl]
psychosocial
/ ˌɪəʊˈəʊʃə /
adjective
of or relating to processes or factors that are both social and psychological in origin
Other Word Forms
- psychosocially adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of psychosocial1
Example Sentences
“The population lives with recurrent and intergenerational psychosocial trauma and social death. For lasting peace, it is urgent that Kashmir be recognized as an equal partner in this tripartite conflict. Walking away from the brink of an unwinnable war by two nuclear states is less and less likely each time.”
"If your point of difference is having overcome some really tough things at a point where everyone else was having it given to them, those psychosocial attributes are really important,, external" he says.
"This suggests that nature-based programs may offer targeted benefits for children with higher levels of mental health vulnerabilities and potentially act as an equalizer of mental health among school-age children," added Sylvana Côté, one of the paper's co-authors and a professor Université de Montréal's school of public health and Canada Research Chair in the Prevention of Psychosocial and Educational Problems in Childhood.
The York systematic review into psychosocial and psychological interventions did not find a single study that even looked at the question of whether psychological interventions can help with gender dysphoria.
The Kenya Red Cross said it was providing psychosocial support services to the pupils, teachers and affected families, and had set up a tracing desk at the school.
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