Education
12 Step
Consequences
Treatment
Recovery
100

The complex, chronic brain disease characterized by drug craving, seeking, and use that persists even in the face of devastating life consequences.

What is addiction?

100

The first twelve-step fellowship, was founded in 1935 by Bill Wilson and Dr. Robert Holbrook Smith.

What is Alcohol's Anonymous (AA)?  

100

The various symptoms that occur after a person abruptly reduces or stops long-term use of a drug.

What is withdrawal?

100

Type of treatment A Better Today, Inc. is.

What is Outpatient treatment?

100

5 skills you have learned in treatment to overcome cravings and triggers.

What is a sponsor, a relapse prevention, emotional regulation, work, being with family/friends, hobbies etc.

200

A highly addictive analgesic drug derived from morphine, often used illicitly as a narcotic producing euphoria.

What is heroin?

200

A worldwide nonprofit organization that provides fellowship and recovery support for men and women with problematic drug use

What is Narcotic' Anonymous (NA)?  

200

Charge for getting pulled over while being intoxicated.

What is a DUI?

200

The process of allowing the body to rid itself of a drug while managing the symptoms of withdrawal; first stage of treatment.

What is detoxification?

200

Involves any high-risk situation or stressor that sparks off a thought, feeling, or action to use drugs/alcohol. This spark, which is experienced as a temptation or desire to use, is called a “craving” or “urge”

What is a trigger?

300

Removed from Coca-Cola in 1903.

What is cocaine?

300

Published in 1939, this is the common name for the text from which our fellowship gets its name.

What is the Big Book?

300

Many commonly prescribed pain pills are actually a combination of an opiate and Tylenol(acetaminophen). Abusing any medication containing acetaminophen can be particularly damaging to which part of the body?

What is the liver?

300

Structured treatment programs aimed at helping those struggling with addiction

What is rehab?

300

Should not be viewed as a failure but should instead be seen as an obstacle to overcome on one's lifelong journey to sobriety.

What is relapse?

400

The most commonly abused drug across the nation.

What is marijuana/cannabis?

400

Made direct amends to such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others.

What is the ninth step?

400

Drug that has these adverse effects:

  • Suppression of breathing (respiration)
  • Dropping of blood pressure
  • Nausea, long periods of vomiting
  • Flushing of skin
  • Dry mouth
  • Muscle spasm
  • Constriction of pupils

What is heroin?

400

For the best chance of staying sober, what is the MINIMUM length of time a person should stay in treatment?

What is 90 days inpatient?

400

This is the process by which the addicted brain invents excuses that allow the person in recovery to edge close enough to relapse situations that accidents can happen

What is justification?

500

This  lobe  of  the  cerebral  cortex  helps  a  person  with  planning,  making decisions,  and  using  self-control.  Alcohol  can  harm  a  person’s  ability  to  plan, make  decisions,  and  use  self-control.  If  alcohol  is  used  over  a  long  period  of time,  this  part  of  the  brain  can  be  damaged  permanently.

What is the frontal lobe?

500

Three Legacies of AA.

What is recovery, unity and service?

500

A felony that makes you loose trust, have dangerous associations with individuals, criminal conduct, and you can use violence for social control.

What is selling or manufacturing drugs?

500

A very important part of treatment that an individual should participate in; Support process in which a counselor holds face to face talks with another person to help him or her solve a personal problem, or help improve that person's attitude, behavior, or character

What is counseling?

500

Double the points (1000):

Our brain learns by ________ and  _________.

What is repetition and reward?

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