Ortho
Intellectual
Behavioral
Youth At-Risk
Aging
100

The term orthopedic refers to conditions caused by disruption of what body system

muscular-skeletal system

100

Cerebral palsy results from damage to this area

brain damage

100
This is known as the handbook used to diagnose and create treatment plans related to mental health disorders
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM)
100

To be this means that a set of presumed cause-effect dynamics place an individual child or adolescent in danger of future negative outcomes

At-risk

100

This statement is consistent with which theory:

People are more successfully if they stay engaged in daily life

Activity theory

200

Hemiplegia is most commonly caused by this type of injury

spinal cord injury

200

lack of social or emotional reciprocity, stereotypical or repetitive motions, lack of varied or spontaneous make-believe play all characterize this disorder

Autism Spectrum Disorder

200

These are 3 possible symptoms of schizophrenia

Delusions

Hallucinations

Catatonic behavior

200

The level of risk on the at-risk continuum that involves the development of gateway behaviors is this

imminent risk

200

This diagnosis exhibits the following symptoms:

loss of intellectual functioning, memory loss, loss of functional skills, and behavior symptoms such as agitation and passivity

Dementia

300

One common symptom of right brain stroke is

weak or paralyzed left side

300

Poor muscle tone, hyperflexibility, visual problems, and premature aging are all characteristics of

Down syndrome

300

This is a mental health care facility that serves individuals who have committed crimes and who are under the supervision of the courts

forensic facility

300

Recreation therapists use this as an experimental intervention to change how a person perceives and responds to challenges

Adventure Therapy

300

This theory suggests that older people withdraw from peripheral social contacts but maintain close relationships with friends and relatives throughout life

Socio-emotional selectivity theory

400

One common symptom of left brain stroke

aphasia

400

Typically, children with this type of Muscular Dystrophy often use wheelchairs by the time they are 12 and die as a result of weakness of the heart and respiratory muscles. It is also the most common type of MD

Duchenne MD

400

Gradually removing external reinforcers as part of a behavior modification program is called this

fading

400

This is an example of what type of prevention:

A program which provides leisure education including leisure awareness, skills training, and resource identification to children who are obese

secondary prevention

400

This intervention cues clients with dementia to think back and recall past experiences, events, memories

Reminiscence 

500

A common intervention group recommended for clients with aphasia is

social skills training

500

While using a sensory room can be beneficial to many different developmental disorders, it is most effective for individuals with this diagnosis who need sensory inputs as cues

Autism 

500

The process of gradually introducing anxiety provoking stimuli in an effort to acclimate the client to its presence is know as this

systematic desensitization

500

This approach is characterized by focusing on a youth's talents, strengths, interests, and potential

Positive youth development approach

500

When working with aging clients, Recreation Therapists try to promote this to create a greater perception of who or what controls him/her from within

internal locus of control