Recovery Basics
Recovery Support Systems
Medicated Assisted Treatment
Random Recovery
Statistics
100

The physical or psychological practice of purposely pausing, breathing, and focusing awareness on the present moment.

What is mindfullness?

100

This 12-step fellowship, founded in 1935, uses sponsors and step work as its core recovery model

What is Alcoholics Anonymous (AA)?



100

an FDA-approved prescription medication used to treat opioid use disorder. It combines buprenorphine, a partial opioid agonist that reduces cravings and withdrawal symptoms, and naloxone, an antagonist that helps prevent misuse. It is taken as a dissolving sublingual film or tablet

What is Suboxone?

100


Awareness, Acceptance, Action





What are the three A's of recovery?

100

In 2022, this many opioid-involved overdose deaths were reported in the U.S. — more than any previous year

What is roughly 82,000 (81,806)?

200

HALT is an acronym that reminds people in recovery to check on these four states before they act on craving

What are hungry, angry, lonely, and tired?

200

This term describes a person further along in recovery who mentors someone newer in a 12-step program



What is a sponsor?

200

The "pleasure chemical" in our brain that plays a major role in substance abuse, addiction, and the reward pathway.

What is dopamine?

200

This dangerous phenomenon can occur if buprenorphine is given too soon after a full opioid agonist, kicking existing opioids off receptors

What is precipitated withdrawal?

200

Each year in the US, nearly 85,000 people die from this legal drug,making it the third leading preventable cause of death in the country

What is about alcohol?



300


A people, place, or thing that elicits a negative emotional response or induces a craving.





What are triggers?

300

This concept means treating co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders together, not separately

What is dual diagnosis / co-occurring treatment?

300

an FDA-approved medication used primarily to treat alcohol use disorder and opioid use disorder. It works by binding to and blocking opioid receptors in the brain, which prevents the euphoric "high" and diminishes the rewarding effects and associated cravings.

What is naltrexone/vivitrol?

300


The physiological or medicinal removal of toxic substances from a living organism





What is detoxification?

300

Up to this percentage of patients who took MAT maintain sobriety at the 2-year mark

What is about 90%

400

This famous prayer, often recited at support meetings, asks for the serenity to accept the things you cannot change, the courage to change the things you can, and the wisdom to know the difference.

What is the serenity prayer?

400

This defense mechanism, common early in recovery, involves refusing to accept the reality of one's substance use disorder

What is denial?

400

This medication used in alcohol use disorder causes severe nausea if alcohol is consumed while taking it

What is disulfiram (Antabuse)?

400

1st symptom experienced as a sign you're developing a substance abuse disorder

What is increased tolerance?

400

A person with untreated opioid use disorder has roughly this many times the risk of premature death compared to the general population

What is 10 times?



500

This term refers to a return to substance use after a period of abstinence, distinguished from a "lapse" (a single slip)

What is a relapse?

500

This term describes the negative emotional/physical symptoms (irritability, poor sleep, low mood) that can persist for MONTHS after stopping substance use



What is Post-Acute Withdrawal Syndrome (PAWS)?



500

This is the general term for using any FDA-approved medication together with counseling and behavioral therapy to treat substance use disorder

What is Medication for Opioid Use Disorder (MOUD) / Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT)?

500

The opposite of addiction

What is connection?

500

This drug is responsible for being mixed into cocaine leading to 8 out of 10 cocaine deaths

What is fentanyl?

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