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  2. Hypnotherapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnotherapy

    Hypnotherapy, also known as hypnotic medicine, [1] is the use of hypnosis in psychotherapy. [2] Hypnotherapy is generally not considered to be based on scientific evidence, and is rarely recommended in clinical practice guidelines. [3]

  3. Should You Try Hypnotherapy for Anxiety? Here's What ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/try-hypnotherapy-anxiety...

    But clinical hypnotherapy (hypnotherapy being another term for hypnosis) is actually a therapeutic technique that’s been recognized by the American Psychological Association, the National ...

  4. Does hypnosis really work? - AOL

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  5. Hypnosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnosis

    Hypnosis has been used as a supplemental approach to cognitive behavioral therapy since as early as 1949. Hypnosis was defined in relation to classical conditioning; where the words of the therapist were the stimuli and the hypnosis would be the conditioned response. Some traditional cognitive behavioral therapy methods were based in classical ...

  6. Hypnotic susceptibility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnotic_susceptibility

    Fantasizers tended to experience hypnosis as being much like other imaginative activities while dissociaters reported it was unlike anything they'd ever experienced. [8] Individuals with dissociative identity disorder have the highest hypnotizability of any clinical group, followed by those with post-traumatic stress disorder .

  7. Hypnotic Ego-Strengthening Procedure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnotic_Ego-Strengthening...

    The Hypnotic Ego-Strengthening Procedure, incorporating its constituent, influential hypnotherapeutic monologue — which delivered an incremental sequence of both suggestions for within-hypnotic influence and suggestions for post-hypnotic influence — was developed and promoted by the British consultant psychiatrist, John Heywood Hartland (1901–1977) in the 1960s.