Hospitalization
Transitions
Symptomatology
In the Community
Pathways to Rehabilitation
100
It is a State-operated hospital in Huntington.
What is the Mildred Mitchell-Bateman Hospital?
100
It was a U. S. Supreme Court decision that people who could live in the community must not remain confined in an institution.
What is the Olmstead decision?
100
It is an old, discredited theory involving maternal figures.
What is the schizophrenogenic mother?
100
It is a form of intensive service coordination provided by a team.
What is Assertive Community Treatment?
100
His work in person-centered and humanist psychology contributed to the foundation for psychiatric rehabilitation.
Who is Carl Rogers?
200
It is a psychiatric hospital in Charleston, WV
What is Highland Hospital?
200
What are three reasons for deinstitutionalization (transitioning from institutions to the community)?
What is psychotropic medications, changes in social security laws, and civil rights decisions?
200
It is a discredited theory about the role of family in the life of a person with a serious mental illness.
What is a dysfunctional family?
200
They are three of the five needs addressed by Assertive Community Treatment.
What are material resources, coping skills, motivation to persevere, freedom from pathological dependent relationships, and a support system that helps with the other four needs.
200
He is best known for developing psychiatric rehabilitation technology.
Who is William Anthony?
300
It lost certification to bill Medicaid and Medicare in 2017.
What is William R. Sharpe, Jr. Hospital?
300
It is a primary predictor of the potential for relapse and re-hospitalization.
What is unemployment?
300
Psychiatric rehabilitation grew out of this theory or model postulated by Anthony and Liberman.
What is Stress/Vulnerability/Coping/Competence Model?
300
They are principles for treating a person with co-occurring mental and substance use disorders.
What are integrated treatment, stagewise treatments (engagement, motivational counseling, active treatment, relapse prevention), long-term perspective, comprehensive services, and interventions for treatment of non-responders
300
They are three alternative terms for the choose - get - keep process.
What are diagnostic phase, planning phase, and intervention phase?
400
She was an advocate for building hospitals for people with psychiatric disabilities.
Who is Dorothea Dix?
400
They are excellent strategies to prevent relapse and rehospitalization.
What are illness management and recovery?
400
Studies suggest that genetic predisposition is necessary, but probably not ________ for the development of a serious mental illness.
What is sufficient?
400
These are reasons for supported education.
What is more opportunities for upward mobility, higher salaries, career satisfaction, setting for developing social networks.
400
They are the three hallmarks of psychiatric rehabilitation.
What are services directed by the consumer, environments of choice, and valued social roles?
500
It was called Weston State Hospital when it closed.
What is the Trans Allegheny Lunatic Asylum?
500
They are two alternatives to hospitalization.
What are crisis residential care and peer-delivered crisis services? Others:In-home crisis intervention and psychosis management Acute partial hospitalization / Day hospitals Early intervention teams – resemble ACT
500
They regulate electrochemical interaction in the brain.
What are neurotransmitters?
500
It is an evidence based practice to help a person choose, get and keep a residence of her or his choice.
What is Housing First?
500
It is a tool to initiate rehabilitation plans and goals.
What is the Importance / Satisfaction Map?