the alteration of behavioral patterns through the use of such learning techniques as biofeedback and positive or negative reinforcement.
What is Behavioral Modification?
People with this condition don't desire or enjoy close relationships, even with family, and are often seen as loners. They may be emotionally cold and detached.
What is Schizoid Personality Disorder?
This theory takes an interdisciplinary approach to understanding how an event at one point in a structure can have direct and rippling effects on other parts of a structure.
What is Systems Theory?
Minimal Collaboration
Basic Collaboration from a distance
Basic Collaboration onsite
Close Collaboration partially integrated
Close Collaboration with shared systems
Fully Integrated
What is the standard framework of integrated care
An SSRI - Fluoxetine
What is Prozac?
a form of psychotherapy that focuses on modifying dysfunctional emotions, behaviors, and thoughts by interrogating and uprooting negative or irrational beliefs.
What is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy?
This is a mental and physical reaction to perceived threats. In small doses it can be helpful. It can protect us from danger and focus our attention on problems. However, when it is too severe, or occurs too frequently, it can be debilitating.
What is Anxiety
the perspective that all human beings are in a state of constant "becoming," that each of us is always striving toward self-actualization through an emphasis on personal strengths and greater mindfulness.
What is Humanistic Theory?
A process where a medical provider requests a real time intervention from another healthcare professional (Behavioral Health).
What is a warm hand off?
An Aminoketone - Buproprion Hydochloride
What is Wellbutrin?
a type of psychotherapy — or talk therapy — that utilizes a cognitive-behavioral approach an emphasizes the psychosocial aspects of treatment.
What is Dialectical Behavioral Therapy?
a mental health disorder that is marked by a combination of schizophrenia symptoms, such as hallucinations or delusions, and mood disorder symptoms, such as depression or mania.
What is Schizoaffective Disorder?
This theory holds that all societies are inherently unequal, and that power disparities have a direct impact on people's lives.
What is Conflict Theory?
Where primary care providers and behavioral care provider share same facility but not same systems. Levels 3 and 4 of the Standard framework of integrated care.
What is co-located care?
An Atypical Antipsychotic - quetiapine
What is Seroquel?
an action-oriented approach to psychotherapy that stems from traditional behavior therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy and focuses on a clients ability to stop denying and avoiding inner emotions and rather to accept them as appropriate responses to particular situations and environments.
What is Acceptance and Commitment Therapy?
a mental condition in which people have an inflated sense of their own importance, a deep need for excessive attention and admiration, troubled relationships, and a lack of empathy for others.
What is Narcissistic Personality Disorder?
Theory is an expansion of Sigmund Freud’s original five stages of development. Erikson, a 20th-century psychologist and psychoanalyst, formulated the eight-stage life cycle theory in 1959 on the supposition that the environment plays a critical role in self-awareness, adjustment, human development and identity.
What is Psychosocial Development Theory?
Improved Patient Experience
Improved Clinical Experience
Better Outcomes
Lower Costs
Justice, Equity, Diversity, Inclusion
What is the Quintuple Aim?
A mood stabilizer - lamotrigine
What is Lamictal?
a hope friendly, positive emotion eliciting, future-oriented vehicle for formulating, motivating, achieving, and sustaining desired behavioral change.
What is Solution Focused Brief Therapy?
characterized by a pattern of excessive attention-seeking behaviors, usually beginning in early childhood, including inappropriate seduction and an excessive desire for approval.
What is Histrionic Personality Disorder?
This theory generally refers to a collection of ideas about how societies can advance toward positive change. It is often incorporated into geopolitical theories and models.
What is Developmental Theory?
A model that emphasizes comprehensive care, a patient-centered approach, coordinated care, accessibility of services, and quality and safety. This model is committed to quality improvement (QI), performance improvement, patient satisfaction, and population health management.
What is a Patient Centered Medical Home (PCMH)?
Benzodiazapine - Alprazolam
What is Xanax?