Schizophrenia
Theories/models for intervention
Trauma and stress
Conditions in older adults
Potpourri
100

This is the time of life it is typically diagnosed. The early ___

20s

100

Creating environments or materials that meet the individual’s sensory processing needs.

Dunn's Sensory Processing models

100

a stress response that is elicited after a highly stressful or traumatic experience, but  symptoms are short lived

Acute stress

100

Visual hallucinations and deficits in motor skills. Rigidity and tremors. Changes in memory, attention and alertness. Can often present as drowsiness, lethargy and speech difficulties. Emotional instability

Lewy Body Disease

100

This approach was specifically designed for Early Intervention (EI) practice and takes contemporary developmental, disability, and implementation science into consideration. Also known as the _______ systems approach.

Developmental

200

The prevalence is slightly higher among....

men

200

Distorted beliefs are identified and then challenged by providing evidence to the contrary.

Cognitive Behavioral Model

200

 the repeated and prolonged activation of the stress response.... interferes with focus, attention span, memory, mood, and the ability to function optimally and participate fully in meaningful life roles and activities.

chronic stress

200

 The progression is more rapid than in Alzheimer’s disease and the need for institutional support and care occurs earlier in the disease, characterized by disinhibition, irrational judgment, impulsiveness, and social discord


Frontotemporal Lobal Degeneration

200

This technique focuses on identifying and reframing task-interfering cognitions and replacing them with task-oriented cognitions. Its abbreviation is the _____ method.

TIC-TOC

300

The time between early symptoms and diagnosis

Prodromal period

300

Skills training targeting mindfulness meditation, interpersonal effectiveness, emotion regulation, and distress tolerance.

Dialectical Behavior Therapy

300

a form of stress that may occur when a person is exposed to situations or events (witnessing or enduring violence, for example) that subsequently overwhelm the ability to cope and participate in occupations

traumatic stress

300

Presents initially with motor difficulty. characterized by disinhibition, irrational judgment, impulsiveness, and social discord

Huntington's disease

300

PTSD patients are diagnosed with ___ stress disorder within 1 month of triggering event

acute

400

Symptom clusters include disorganized, affective domains, psychotic, and ____

negative

400

The focus of this approach is not on cognitive subskills such as attention and memory, but on the functional information processing capacity of the individual. This capacity is modifiable and varies as the activity, environment, and person change.... cognition is dynamic.

Dynamic interactional approach

400

the ability to recover and even thrive in the face of trauma, stress, or adversity

Resilience

400

This disease has three stages: preclinical or presymptomatic, mild cognitive impairment, and dementia. It's the most common type of dementia

Alzheimer's

400

____ experiences: often referred to as being on a continuum that can range from daydreaming, to feeling less present in one’s body, to the more extreme fragmentation of one’s sense of self and/or identity

Disassociative

500

A type of schizophrenia: a combination of mood and psychotic symptoms.

Schizoaffective disorder

500

Remediation not possible; Focus is on modifications to the activity and environment form the basis for intervention

Cognitive Disabilities Model

500

occurs when an individual experiences stressors (nontraumatic or traumatic in nature) that trigger a cascade of emotional responses and a host of corresponding occupational difficulties within 3 months of event, and not attributable to other mental health conditions.

Adjustment disorder

500

The criteria for a diagnosis of mild ___ includes moderate cognitive decline that does not impact performance of daily activities

NCD (neurocognitive decline)

500

Symptoms include tremors, weakness, poor dexterity, bradykinesia, fatigue, depression, apathy, gait impairment, and cognitive deficit 

Parkinson's disease