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NAADAC Test
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Only use this two-part Test if your relicensure/recertification will
ONLY accept NAADAC
and will NOT accept APA, ASWB, NBCC, or state providerships.
To check your requirements click here.
Only NAADAC requires that 10 hour courses be divided into two parts. NAADAC states,
"Participant credit for on-line courses will be limited to eight (8) hours of credit within a
twenty four (24) hour period of time."  However, If your relicensure/recertification will accept
APA, ASWB, NBCC, or a state providership...
...Return to the Standard Test for this course by clicking here.

Answer Book PART ONE for which you will receive a 5 CE hr certificate.

Answer questions below. Then click the "Check Your Score" button below. This Test screen gives you FREE scoring and anonymous unlimited FREE trials. If you get a score of 80% or higher, and place a credit card order online, you can get an Instant Certificate for 10 CE's.
If you have problems with Scoring or placing an Order, please contact us at ceorderquestions@gmail.com


Audio Transcript Questions The answer to Question 1 is found in Track 1 of the Course Content. The Answer to Question 2 is found in Track 2 of the Course Content... and so on. Select correct answer from below. Place letter on the blank line before the corresponding question.
Important Note! Underlined numbers below are links to that Section. If you close your browser (i.e. Explorer, Firefox, Chrome, etc..) your answers will not be retained. So write them down for future work sessions.

Answer Book PART ONE for which you will receive a 5 CE hr certificate.
Questions:
1. What are the three tools addicts use to control the people in their lives?
2. What is the danger of the "threaten, punish, and relent" cycle?
3. What are the three main reasons families of addicts are resistant to trying new methods of dealing with their situation?
4. What are the four basic roles children of addicts adopt to connect with their families?
5. What three steps are required for the "Build Up Your Courage Muscles" exercise?
6. What are the three main purposes of anger in the families of addicts?
7. What two powerful life forces control a caretaker?
8. What is meant by the ABCs of a blame statement?
9. According to Larsen, what are the four character defect personality types of family members of addicts?
10. What are the five negotiation styles found in the families of addicts?
11. What are four key considerations in preparing for a structured family intervention?
12. What are the first five steps in preparing for a structured family intervention?
13. What are the three sections to an intervention letter?
14. If the addict comes up with a relapse agreement that is not healthy or satisfactory, what could the family do?

Answers:
A. Avoiding the pain caused by an addict’s crisis, and seeking the pleasure of relief when the crisis is averted.
B.
Manipulation, mistrust, and misdirection.
C. They get locked into a habit of recycling past actions, they relegate themselves to the sidelines, and they feel "comfortable" with the way they have always dealt with things.
D. Building a team, setting up a planning meeting, choosing a team chairperson, discussing the negative consequences of the addiction, and listing ways family members have unwittingly enabled the addiction.
E. The love section, the honesty section, and the hope-for-the-future section.
F. The action, the belief, and the emotional consequences.
G. To instruct the addict, to keep the addict from hurting himself or others, and to make emotional connections.
H. The addict should not be forewarned of the intervention, many clients need to be reminded that the addiction, not the addict, is the adversary, family members need to learn skills for an intervention, and possible complications might require additional professional help.
I. The family can refuse to sign the agreement, and the addict can be encouraged to discuss in group therapy how to formulate a better agreement.
J.  The family member focuses on trying to change the behavior of the addict, rather than on healing him or herself.
K. The caretaker, the perfectionist, the procrastinator, and the rageoholic.
L. Support, a history of success, and a courage talisman.
M.  Adversaries, aggressors, appeasers, avoiders, and analysts.
N. The hero, the scapegoat, the lost child, and the mascot.

Answer Book PART TWO for which you will receive a 5 CE hr certificate.
For NAADAC compliance:
This second part can only be completed after 24 hours have passed since you completed Part ONE above. To get your second 5 hour CE certificate, the elapse of the 24 hours is determined by when the first 5 hr CE certificate for Part ONE was issued to you.  You, of course, can complete part 2 any time after 24 hrs have passed, since receiving your first 5 CE hr certificate for part 1.
Questions? Please call 317-348-0121 or email info@mentalhealthce.com

Course Content Manual Questions The answer to Question 15 is found in Section 15 of the Course Content. The Answer to Question 16 is found in Section 16 of the Course Content... and so on. Select correct answer from below. Place letter on the blank line before the corresponding question.
Important Note! Underlined numbers below are links to that Section. If you close your browser (i.e. Explorer, Firefox, Chrome, etc..) your answers will not be retained. So write them down for future work sessions.

Questions:
15. What are the three rules in the families of addicts?
16. By what age do most children develop accurate perceptions of the role of alcohol and other drugs in their parent’s lives?
17. What are the three methods family members use for coping with substance abuse?
18. According to Hogan, how are children in the families of addicts placed into an "impossible situation"?
19. According to McKeganey, what are the biggest risks to the children of addicts?
20. According to Werner, what are the three important issues a family must confront to help them obtain treatment?
21. According to Halford, why were women in the study resistant to suggestions to change the antecedents and consequences of drinking?
22. According to Copello, what are the five steps for reducing harm in the families of addicts?
23. What is "unilateral family therapy"?
24. What are Barber’s five "levels of pressure" in the "Pressures to Change" procedure?
25. According to Lease, the angry/violent drinking behavior style had what influences on the adult children of alcoholics?
26. According to Finkelstein, why are mothers in recovery prone to relapse?

Answers:

A. Getting to know the family and the problem, providing relevant information, counseling about coping, exploring and enhancing social support, and discussing the need for further help.
B. By age 7 or 8.
C.  This form of therapy works only with the family of the addict, and trains them in adopting a positive rehabilitative role, as well as interventions to increase the well-being of the non-using family members.
D. Don’t talk, don’t feel, and don’t trust.
E. Providing the non-using partner with information about the change process, "incompatible activities", "responding",
"contracting", and "confrontation".
F.  Stress management emphasized that the man is responsible for his drinking, and that the woman should not blame herself. As the participants came to internalize these beliefs, they often saw changing their own behavior to promote drinking control in their partner as inconsistent with these beliefs.
G. Material deprivation and neglect, the risk of physical abuse and violence, exposure to criminal behavior, and the break-up of the family.
H. This drinking style was associated with decreased intimacy and personal authority, increased intimidation, and a fearful attachment style.
I. They are bound to silence by loyalty to their parents and their desire to protect themselves, their parents, and their families from social censure and exclusion.
J. Mothers in early recovery may experience a great deal of guilt or shame over their past behaviors, and behavioral or cognitive problems in the child, perhaps due to prenatal alcohol or drug exposure, may compound the mothers' feelings of guilt.
K.  The family must acknowledge their denial of the addiction, understand the impact of the substance abuse, and realize that they did not cause the alcoholism, but their behavior can contribute to the disease.
L. Coping engaged, coping tolerant, and coping withdrawal.


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