A complete lack of joy or pleasure
What is Anhedonia?
Representing Criterion A, one or both of these must be present in Schizophrenia
What are Delusions and Hallucinations?
Term for medications used in the treatment of thought disorders and extreme mood disorders
What is Antipsychotic?
Used in controlling hallucinations, this skill involves reducing the amount of stimuli in the environment
What is attention-narrowing?
What is Positive Symptoms?
What is Hypomania?
Clients struggling with medication adherence may benefit from this type of medication being added to their treatment plan
What are Long-acting Injectables (LAIs)?
These skills are most frequently used in controlling and regulating disordered mood and extreme anxiety
What are grounding skills?
This involves severe psychomotor retardation to the point of entirely neglected ADLs and no responsiveness to prompting.
What is catatonia?
The potential amount of weight gained or lost during a Major Depressive Episode
What is 5%?
Medications such as Haloperidol belong to this category
What are 1st generation anti-psychotics?
A practice intended to limit attention to only that which is currently happening; often referred to as a "here-and-now" mentality
What is mindfulness?
These are hallucinations felt through the body
What are tactile hallucinations?
The length of time a Major Depressive Episode must last to be considered Major Depressive Disorder
What is 2 weeks?
Term used to describe the group of side effects involving involuntary muscle movements
What is extrapyramidal?
These can be helpful for tracking fluctuations in symptoms and developing insight into maladaptive patterns of thought
What is a thought log?
Pattern of thought involving persistent redirection to a specific unrelated topic or repetition of specific words or phrases
What is perseveration?
The number of different personality disorder clusters
What is 3?
This medication requires regular lab monitoring to prevent agranulocytosis
What is Clozapine?
A specific form of breathing, activating the vagus nerve, thus triggering relaxation
What is diaphragmatic breathing?