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CASAC EXAM PRACTICE NEWEST EDITION 2025-2026.QUESTIONS & CORRECT DETAILED ANSWERS.GRADED A, Exams of Medical Sciences
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CORRECT DETAILED ANSWERS.GRADED A, Exams of Medical Sciences MAST - ANSWERmichigan alcohol and screening test DAST - ANSWERdrug abuse screening test AUDIT - ANSWERalcohol use disorder identification test CAGE - ANSWERalcohol screening tool ASAM - ANSWERamerican society of medicine TWEAK - ANSWERalcohol screening instrument for pregnant women SASSI - ANSWERsubstance abuse subtle screening inventory SBIRT - ANSWERscreening brief intervention and referral to treatment BDI - ANSWERbeck depression inventory
MDQ - ANSWERmood disorder questionnaire SAFE-T - ANSWERsuicide assessment five step evaluation and triage MMPI - ANSWERminnesota multiphasic personality inventory CRAFT - ANSWERbehavioral health screening tool used w/ children schedule I drugs - ANSWERare substances or chemicals are defined as drugs with no currently accepted medical use and high potential for abuse. These drugs are the most dangerous drugs of all schedules with potentially severe psychological or physical dependence. heroin, LSD, marijuana, ecstasy, methaqualone and peyote - ANSWERschedule I drugs schedule II drugs - ANSWERare defined as drugs with a high potential for abuse, less abuse potential than schedule I drugs, with use potentially leading to severe psychological or physical dependence. These drugs are also considered dangerous. Vicodin, cocaine, methamphetamine, methadone, hydromorphone (dilaudid) merperdine (demerol), oxycodone (oxycontin), fentanyl, dexedrine, adderall and ritalin - ANSWERSchedule II drugs Schedule III drugs - ANSWERare drugs with moderate to low potential for physical and psychological dependence. These drugs of abuse potential is less than schedule I and II drugs but more than schedule IV.
maintenance - ANSWERthe user establishes new behaviors on a long-term basis cross tolerance - ANSWERoccurs when one who is tolerant to the effects of certain drug also develops a tolerance to another drug. often happens between two drugs with similar functions or effects medical model theory - ANSWERIt looks at genetic predisposition, response to addictive medicine, risk factors, practice, change from use to addiction. cultural model theory - ANSWERbelieves that a patient must be addressed when providing care. certain bx may be attributed to the culture of the patient and would be unethical to disrupt any bx's that are related to culture. moral model theory - ANSWERinvolves temptation which is seen as the root of the addiction. This emphasizes spiritual aspects of recovery. this has fall out of favor bc the medical community identifies addiction as a real disease Bio-psycho-social model - ANSWERis an attempt to explain addiction starts, continues and maintained.