Name the therapy
Are you ready to change?
Motivate me
Alcoholics Anonymous
Join the group
100

In this therapy, negative patterns of thought about the self and the world are challenged in order to alter unwanted behaviour patterns.

What is cognitive behavioural therapy?

100

In this stage, individuals have no insight into their substance use.

What is precontemplation?

100

Statements of appreciation or understanding

What are affiirmations?

100

This alternative group promotes abstinence from alcohol or drugs through self-empowerment and self-directed change

What is SMART?

100

These groups are less structured and give participants opportunities to create their own agenda in terms of problems, conflicts, or struggles to work on.

What are counselling groups?

200

This approach utilizes operant conditioning to help individuals with substance use disorder meet their pre-specified goals.

What is contingency management?

200

In this stage, individuals have full insight and are ready to change.

What is preparation?

200
The assumption that motivation for change resides in the patient and must be drawn out of the patient.

What is evocation?

200

The study which found that those lacking a social network supportive of sobriety did better in 12-step facilitation therapy than CBT/MET at 3 years follow-up.

What is Project MATCH?

200

These provide info about specific topics related to addiction and recovery, to help patients begin to learn to cope with the challenges of recovery.

What are psychoeducational recovery groups?

300

This approach employs a client-centered counseling style that fosters behavioural change by helping patients explore and resolve ambivalence to change.

What is motivational interviewing?

300
In this stage, individuals primarily use self-reinforcements and forms of contingency management.

What is action?

300

This type of response heightens the resistance that is heard from the patient beyond simply repeating what has been shared.

What is amplified reflection?

300

The number of steps in AA that refer explicitly to God.

What is four?

300

These help individuals improve their intrapersonal and interpersonal skills through problem-solving methods, stress management, cognitive methods, and relapse prevention.

What are coping skills groups?

400

This therapy draws on a support of family and peers who are introduced into individual therapy sessions, who help the physician in sustaining the patient's abstinence. The physician acts as a task-oriented team leader, rather than a family therapist towards restructuring relationships.

What is network therapy?

400

This stage relies on counterconditioning.

What is maintenance?

400

Learnable skill that promotes understanding of a patient's unique perspective, situation, feeling, and values.

What is empathy?

400

Individuals with this style of coping with problems are more likely to have successful outcomes in AA.

What is avoidant?

400

Central to this group is the disease model of addiction, which inconsistent with cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT).

What is Alcoholics Anonymous?

500

In this therapy, clinicians provides patient with normative feedback about how their substance use compares to that of other people their age and gender.

What is motivational enhancement therapy (MET)?

500

In this stage, the individual engages in cognitive and emotional assessment of their self-image.

What is contemplation?
500
The process of learning healthier behaviours that can substitute for addictive behaviours.

What is counterconditioning?

500
Although this therapy is performed to help patients attend and benefit from 12-step meetings, it is not AA, nor is it endorsed by AA.

What is twelve-step facilitation?

500
These groups are offered in residential and hospital programs, and usually involve a group meeting to start and/or end the day.

What are milieu groups?