The use of mood-altering drugs that interferes with or has a negative effect on a person's life.
What is substance use disorder?
Internal, external, and sensory
What are types of triggers?
Cocaine, methamphetamines, diet pills, caffeine, nicotine
What are stimulants?
9 am
What is the time that IOP starts?
Stimulants, depressants, and hallucinogens
What is types of mood-altering drugs?
Feelings that people have before or during drinking alcohol or using drugs
What are internal triggers?
The state of being high
What is intoxication?
The most important rule in groups
What is confidentiality?
The idea that addiction gets worse, not better, over time.
What is "addiction is progressive"?
People, places, and things associated with drinking alcohol or using other drugs
External triggers
A severe stage of confusion, sometimes caused by using strong stimulants over a long period of time
Trigger-Thought-Craving-Relapse
What is the process of relapse?
The inability to control the amount of alcohol or other drugs that one may drink or use.
What is poor control over use?
Senses of sight, sound, taste, and touch
What are sensory triggers?
The unpredictability of this substance can easily lead to overdose
What is PCP?
The 10/90 rule
Life is 10% what happens to you and 90% how you react to it
Acronym for the primary guide used by health care professionals for the diagnosis of substance use disorders
What is the DSM-5 (diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders)?
The mental switch; turning off the switch to turn off drug thoughts
A wide variety of herbal mixtures that are inaccurately marketed as related to marijuana
What are synthetic cannabinoids?
The major benefits of attending IOP
Accountability, structure, sober support, learning tools for recovery.