Recovery
Coping Skills
Triggers
Relapse Prevention
Treatment
100

Binge drinking is more common in this gender.

Male 

100

Name 2 coping strategies you use to cope with stress. 

Good job!


100

Identify and describe three of your triggers.

Good Job!

100

The return of a disease or the signs and symptoms of a disease after a period of improvement.

What is a Relapse?
100

IOP stands for what?

Intensive Out-Patient Treatment 

200

The condition of being dependent on a particular substance, thing, or activity.

Addiction 

200

Three things to alleviate stress?  

Acceptable answers:  Meditation, sports, dancing, reading, prayer, painting, yoga, (any activity that has a calming effect on a person) 

200

Hungry, Angry, Lonely, Tired

H.A.L.T.

200

An action plan designed to motivate and guide a person toward a change and preventing relapse.

Relapse Prevention Plan

200

Needing to drink more to experience the same effect.

What is tolerance

300

Who founded AA?

Dr. Bob and Bill Wilson

300

List three people you can talk to when you are struggling.

Family members, Sober Friends, A Sponsor, A Therapist, A Doctor, AA/NA Members

300

What is the biggest trigger for most relapses?

Stress

300

Describe three catastrophic events that could lead to relapse justifications.

End of a relationship, Injury, Illness, Loss of a job, Death, Anniversary, Divorce

300

We admitted we were powerless over our addiction, that our lives had become unmanageable.

Step 1

400

With continued substance abuse the brain will stop producing this brain chemical that enables pleasure.

What is Dopamine

400

Occurs when alcohol concentration in the blood reaches near-critical levels.

What is alcohol poisoning 

400

How do you calm a triggered person?

How do you calm a triggered person?




  1. Let them know that they can contact you. This is a simple gesture but a very important one. 
  2. Be physically close to them.
  3. Distract and/or comfort them. 
  4. Don't be judgmental.
  5. Keep them talking.
  6. Remind them why they got sober.
  7. Play the tape all the way through. 


400

Thinking about people, places, and things you used with, Glamorizing your past use, Lying, Hanging out with old using friends, Fantasizing about using, Thinking about relapsing, Planning your relapse around other people's schedules

Mental Relapse

400

This chapter starts with: Rarely have we seen a person fail who has thoroughly followed our path.

What is Chapter 5.


500

Overdoses caused by _________ are more common than heroin and cocaine overdoses combined.

painkillers 

500

This mindfulness activity has been scientifically proven to increase positive moods, and help with emotional regulation, when practiced daily.

Meditation 

500

You are at an event and get triggered. What are three things you should do after you recognize a trigger?

Call a friend/sponsor, leave the event, go to a meeting, have a safe ride, use coping skills, verbalize the trigger

500

Showering, eating healthy, exercising, attending doctor's appointments are all examples of what.

Self-care/Health maintenance 

500

More people receive treatment for ________ than any other substance.

Alcohol

600

In addition to attending treatment and participating in wrap-around services (skill-building, therapy, psychiatry, etc.), is beneficial to a recovering alcoholics in order to receive support in their community and meet others in recovery. 

What are meetings

600

Identify one coping skill/calming activity/positive act in each element of health of the SPIES acronym. 

reminder: Spiritual, Physical, Intellectual, Emotional, Social 

Good Job!

600

Anything that provokes a memory or impulse to resume using drugs or alcohol, especially for a person who is in recovery or has completed a substance abuse treatment program.

What is a Trigger


600

The BIG 3 to avoid in order to prevent relapse. 

People, places, and things

600

The principle or practice of complete abstinence from alcoholic drinks.

"Teetotalism"

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