This psychological intervention plays the largest role in relapse prevention.
What is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy?
The premise that cognitions influence feelings and behaviors, and that subsequent behaviors and emotions can influence cognitions
What is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy?
How often do code 7's need to be seen in their first 30 days?
What is 2x a week for 30 mins each?
A state of psychological or physical dependence (or both) on the use of alcohol, drugs, and behavioral disorders
What is Addiction?
The coexistence of both a mental illness and a substance use disorder.
What is a co-occurring disorder?
Reminders that put people in a mental and emotional place of distress, pain, anger, frustration, and other strong emotions. They are often some sort of internal or external stimulus that causes the desire to use drugs or alcohol again.
What is a Trigger?
Designed to serve five functions: enhance capabilities, increase motivation, enhance generalization to the natural environment, structure the environment, and improve clinician capabilities and motivation to treat effectively
What is Dialectal Behavioral Therapy?
Tara, Kendall, Carissa, Christina
Who are the OBOT counselors?
A need for increased amounts of a substance to achieve intoxication or desired effect.
What is tolerance?
The process of patients calling in for a med check.
What is diversion control?
The relapse rate for opioid use (2014)?
What is 88%
Focuses on the context and function of psychological experiences (e.g., thoughts, feelings, and sensations) as the target of interventions, rather than on the actual form or frequency of particular symptoms
What is Acceptance Commitment Therapy (ACT)
Dispensed the same as methadone however, specific time in treatment is not required for going up in code
What is Bupe OTP?
Percent of addiction that is considered genetic.
Injection drug use is the major source of this infection in the United States as well as our patients.
Hepatitis (B&C)
In this stage of relapse individuals are not thinking about using, but their emotions and behaviors are setting them up for relapse down the road. Because clients are not consciously thinking about using during this stage, denial is a big part of this stage.
What is Emotional Relapse?
Expressing empathy, developing discrepancy, avoiding arguments and confrontations, adjusting to client resistance and supporting a client's self-efficacy and optimism are the 5 key principles of this intervention.
What is Motivational Interviewing.
Criteria for a Code T
What is 1 year in treatment, successful diversion at code 1, favorable testing, counseling compliance, and has been all previous codes prior for a minimum of 30 days.
Mild Opiate Use Disorder
What is 2-3 of 11 DSM-5 criteria over 12 months?
Binds to opioid receptors and activates them to cause pain relief, decrease withdrawal symptoms, and control cravings. Example: Methadone
What is an Opioid Agonist?
This stage of recovery is about developing skills that individuals may have never learned and that predisposed them to addiction. This stage is about moving forward. Clinical experience has shown that this stage usually starts 3 to 5 years after individuals have stopped using drugs or alcohol and is a lifetime path
Brief resource-oriented and goal-focused therapeutic approach that helps individuals change by constructing solutions.
What is Solution Focused Therapy?
3 key aspects of BHG's mission statement.
What is Hope, Respect, and Caring.
Two drugs which withdrawal symptoms can cause death.
Alcohol and Benzodiazepines.
This is responsible for providing administrative, medical, and pharmaceutical oversight to certified opioid treatment programs, including, but not limited to planning, developing, educating, and implementing policies and procedures to ensure that opioid addiction treatment
What is the State Opioid Treatment Authority (SOTA)