Compare and contrast remotivation therapy groups and reminiscing groups
What will be an ideal response?
Compare and contrast remotivation therapy groups and reminiscing groups.
• Remotivation therapy groups are aimed at helping older clients become more invested in the present and future
• Reminiscing groups are aimed at sharing memories with the goal of promoting self understanding, preserving history, and reinforcing coping mechanisms
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Clinical intuition and hunches flow from all of the following EXCEPT:
A. Personal experiences of the clinician B. Knowledge about larger social and political issues C. Clinical theory and research D. Coming from an intuitive family E. Experience with the specific client
In fostering a collaborative process, when a client has been in treatment before, it's necessary to:
A) ?ask the client what brought them to their initial treatment. B) ?explain your techniques and expectations as their new therapist. C) ?ask the client what was and wasn't helpful in previous therapeutic encounters. D) ?adapt to the client's expectations of therapy by building upon the previous therapist's techniques.
Of the following, which is not a major reason for community mental health centers' decrease in service to the chronically mentally ill?
A) ?Their inability to pay or get insurance coverage by gatekeeping HMOs B) ?De-emphasis of these low functioning individuals by the mental health clinics and a move toward more "normal" clients C) ?An inability to find qualified numbers of therapists to staff such clinics for such difficult clients D) ?More chronic mentally ill individuals are being returned to the community due to funding cutbacks at state hospitals and prisons.
Guilford's model of intelligence can best be described by which of the following?
a. A circle in which cognitive operations are recycled. b. A parallelogram in which opposing cognitive functions complement understanding and occur simultaneously. c. A cube with three kinds of cognitive ability and different mental abilities will require different combinations of these abilities. d. An abyss in which cognitive functions are embedded in unconscious cognitive structures.