Drugs Inc.
Treatment Plan
Pretty Little Teens
Family Matters/ Values
Brain Development
100
The 3 most commonly psychoactive drugs abused by teens.
What is Alcohol, marijuana and tobacco?
100
A part of the Al-Anon family, this is a fellowship of young Al-Anon members.
What is Ala- Teen?
100
The social force that causes teens to participate in drug use.
What is peer pressure?
100
Since most young drug abusers do not see the need for treatment, most often the family must conduct one of (these).
What is an Intervention?
100
The period when sexual maturation begins.
What is Puberty?
200
Teens who abuse these, typically obtained them from their parents' medicine cabinet.
What are prescription meds, painkillers or benzos?
200
To increase the likelihood that an adolescent with a substance abuse problem will become affiliated in a 12-step program, they should participate in this
What is Twelve-step facilitation therapy?
200
The most current "safe alternatives" to smoking that teens use as an accessory to a rebellious identity.
What is vaping?
200
To fit in, to feel good, to feel better, to do better, to experiment, family expectations and social pressure.
What are the reasons teens abuse drugs?
200
According to Piaget, (this) is the cognitive development stage when teens begin to form their own beliefs and consider alternatives in their thinking.
What is the Formal Operational Stage?
300
This type of drinking increases the risk of addiction in the young adolescent brain.
What is Binge Drinking?
300
To reinforce gains made in treatment, adolescents may benefit from (these): which included continuing care, mutual help groups, peer recovery groups and recovery high schools.
What are Recovery Support Services?
300
This population is more likely to have conduct, behavioral, and learning problems which may be very disruptive to school, family and community.
Who are Adolescent Males?
300
(This) Process can be frustrating for many parents especially when teens challenge the religion, or cultural values held sacred by the family or when youth directly challenges parental authority.
What is the exploratory process?
300
According to Erickson, this is the stage or personality development during the adolescent years.
What is the Identity vs Identity confusion stage?
400
Most High School students do no think smoking ( this) carries any type of risk.
What is Marijuana?
400
Using the family system, (this) combines behavioral contracting with contingency management to address not only the substance abuse but other behavioral problems.
What is Family Behavior Therapy ( FBT)
400
African-American teens are at risk of having less parental Supervision due to this disproportionate issue.
What is incarceration?
400
For Example: if one child has an addiction, the siblings may take on certain roles that are inappropriate for their age
What is the development of dysfunctional roles?
400
Due to its late development, this part of the brain is responsible for teens engaging in impulsive and risky behavior.
What is the frontal lobe?
500
Declining Grades, Injuries due to accidents, transmission of STD's, Mental Health Problems, Social Isolation and family crises.
What are the consequences of youth substance abuse?
500
(This) approach provides adolescents an opportunity to earn low-cost incentives ( prizes, or cash vouchers) in exchange for participating in drug treatment, achieving goals and not using drugs.
What is Contingency management?
500
This consequence that happens in adolescents is responsible for making a 30 year behave like a 16 year old teenager.
What is stunted cognitive development due to Drug and Alcohol Addiction?
500
Introduction of this scientific outlook on addiction can help traditionally rigid families re-frame teenage addiction from a moral issue to a health issue.
What is The Disease Model?
500
Consequence of adolescent addiction and subsequent lack of emotional growth
What is Arrested Development?
M
e
n
u