Psychopharmacology
Mental Health Act
Diagnosis
Strengths and Recovery
History
100

This is the world’s most commonly used psychoactive compound

What is Caffeine?

100

This is an order authorizing the compulsory treatment in the community of a person may be made by the Tribunal

What is a Community Treatment Order (CTO)?

100

This is the primary system for identifying mental health conditions in Australia

What is the DSM-5?

100

 A deeply personal, unique process of changing one’s attitudes, values, goals, skills and/or roles. It is a way of living a satisfying, hopeful and contributing life even within the limitations caused by the illness. This involves the development of new meaning and purpose in one’s life as one grows beyond the catastrophic effects of mental illness.

What is Personal Recovery?

100

This was the first antipsychotic medication to be developed

What is Largactyl (Chlorpromazine)?

200

This is the most commonly used antipsychotic in the ESMHS

What is Olanzapine?

200

This is the year the current NSW Mental Health Act was created.

What is 2007?

200

This category of disorders relates to experiencing persistent feelings of sadness and hopelessness and individuals may lose interest in activities they once enjoyed.

What are Depressive Disorders?

200

This training is mandatory for all MHRU and community staff

What is the Two day Strengths and Recovery coure?

200

This person was Australia’s first mental health nurse

Who is Martha Entwistle?

300

This medication class acts on the same receptors as alcohol?

What are Barbiturates or Benzodiazepines? (GABA Receptors)

300

This guiding principle of the MHA (2007) is that all care should be provided in this setting

What is the least restrictive environment possible?

300

Absences or reductions of thought processes, emotions and behaviors that were present prior to the onset of the illness but have since diminished or are absent following the onset of the the illness.

What are Negative Symptoms?

300

There is a 90% lifetime exposure to this in psychiatric patients

What is Trauma?

300

The building housing the Prince of Wales Acute and Sub-acute units is named after this person

Who is Professor Leslie Gordon Kiloh (1917-1997)?

400

This class of antidepressants work by blocking the reabsorption of the neurotransmitter's serotonin and norepinephrine in the brain

What are Selective Norepinephrine Reuptake Inhibitors (SNRIs)?

400

This section of the MHA (2007) enables detention of a person after apprehension by policy

What is Section 22?

400

This endocrine disorder can cause mania

What is Thyrotoxicosis or Cushing’s syndrome?

400

This person famously quoted “The important question in psychiatry isn’t whats wrong with you but what happened to you?”

Who is Eleanor Longden?

400

This therapy was a precursor to ECT. It was utilized due to the belief at the time that conditions such as epilepsy and mental illness could not exist together.

What is Metrazol Therapy?

500

Mood stabilizers may reverse impairments in this area

What is Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), or brain structure?

500

This is a premises subject to an order in force under section 109 of the MHA (2007)

What is a Declared Mental Health Facility?

500

A person with this disorder neither enjoys nor desires close relationships, prefers solitary activities, has little interest in sexual activity, is indifferent to either praise or criticism, and shows emotional frigidity

What is Schizoid Personality Disorder?

500

These people designed the strengths assessment and strengths and recovery principles

Who are Rapp and Goscha?

500

This outdated psychiatric diagnosis originally designated a chronic, deteriorating psychotic disorder characterized by rapid cognitive disintegration, usually beginning in the late teens or early adulthood.

What is Dementia Praecox?

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