This is the assessment used to assist SUD counselors with making a decision regarding what level of care clients should be referred.
Patient Placement Criteria (will also accept ASAM Assessment or PPC-2)
This is an important part of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) that supports favorable outcomes and takes the shape of handouts and worksheets the client completes outside of the group treatment.
Homework
This is one of the two reasons that group treatment is the most common treatment modality for treating SUDs.
Clinically effective or Cost effective
This is the ASAM spectrum of SUD treatment settings categorized by the intensity of the services provided and the restrictiveness of the therapeutic environment.
Continuum of Care
Pharmacotherapy used to assist clients with staying abstinent from illicit drugs and/or alcohol is also known as this.
Medication-assisted treatment (or MAT)
This is a 12-step self-help support group dedicated to helping members stay sober from the use of drugs or alcohol.
Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymous (also accept AA/NA)
This is the main difference between clinically-managed treatment and medically-managed treatment.
Both levels of care staff substance use disorder specialists but medically-managed care also includes 24/7 medical care.
This type of treatment uses eye-movements paired with physical tapping in an effort to reduce painful or traumatic memories.
Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (or EMDR)
This stage in group treatment is when participants begin to transfer group gains to outside settings and is the beginning of the end. Satisfaction surveys may be distributed for participants feedback.
Final Stages (will also accept Termination and Adjourning Stage)
This is the type of treatment provided to individuals suffering withdrawal syndrome. Patients are usually treated with medications in a hospital setting by medical staff (hint: this is not a level of care on the continuum).
Detoxification (will also accept detox)
1. Motivate change
2. Resolve ambivalence
What does "matching readiness to change" mean in relation to referring clients to group treatment.
Matching readiness to change refers to insuring a treatment groups' members are homogenous in terms of their stage of change.
Level 2.1 on the ASAM Care Continuum, this is the level of care provides a client at least 9 but less than 20 hours of multi-dimensional treatment a week. Clients present to programming daily but return to their homes at the end of the day.
Intensive Outpatient Treatment (will also accept IOP)
These are the 5 motivational stages of change.
1. Pre-contemplation
2. Contemplation
3. Preparation
4. Action
5. Maintenance
This type of group therapy includes several families working through substance use disorder issues.
Multi-family group (or multiple family group)