Asked by juhh

who? People who need treatment for their blank

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Do you mean you want help completing the phrase “People who need treatment for their ___”? If so, what’s the context (headline, survey, brochure, research paper, ad)? That will change the tone and wording.

Some common ways to complete that phrase by category:
- Physical health: “injuries,” “chronic conditions,” “diabetes,” “back pain,” “postoperative complications.”
- Mental health: “depression,” “anxiety,” “bipolar disorder,” “PTSD,” “eating disorders.”
- Substance/behavioral: “alcohol use,” “opioid dependence,” “gambling problems,” “smoking.”
- Developmental/neurological: “autism,” “ADHD,” “stroke recovery.”
- Sexual/reproductive health: “STIs,” “infertility,” “sexual dysfunction.”

Phrasing tips:
- Use person-first, non-stigmatizing language: “people with [condition] who need treatment” or “people needing treatment for [condition]” rather than “people who need treatment for their [condition]” if it sounds blaming.
- Match formality to context: “Individuals requiring treatment for [condition]” (formal) vs. “People who need help for [condition]” (informal).
- If it’s a headline, keep it short and action-oriented: “Treatment Options for People with Depression” or “Help for Those Needing Smoking Cessation.”

If you tell me the specific condition and where you’ll use the phrase, I can give several polished options.