Not exact matches
«What we're trying to get them to look for are, that aggressive person who's not taking no for an answer; the group that is using catcalls or putdowns, just verbally harassing customers; the person who comes in and perhaps buys one
drink but is watching to see who's
drinking a lot or ordering a lot
of drinks for a
particular person, those
types of behaviors that may indicate they're there for a different reason,» says Craft.
In recent years, a number
of clinical studies have suggested that «matching»
particular types of alcoholics with
particular treatments — for example, teaching someone with poor impulse control how to think through actions before taking them — would help them quit
drinking.
[50] This recommended practice would seem to be especially helpful in circumstances where defence counsel has a legal practice focused largely upon a
particular type of case (e.g.
drinking and driving cases), where it would be easy for counsel to confuse one case with another, especially where counsel defends a high volume
of such cases each year.