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Post-Test.

Answer questions. Then click the "Check Your Score" button. This Answer Booklet gives you FREE scoring and unlimited FREE trials. When you get a score of 80% or higher, and place a credit card order, you can download a Certificate for 2 CE. Click for Psychologist Posttest.

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Questions:

1. How would you explain to your client who is a veteran "what is
mindful awareness?"
2. How could you explain to a veteran the skill of "being in the present"?
3. When working with a veteran who has combat-related PTSD, an example of how CBT therapy might be utilized in restructuring his or her thoughts from “it was my fault” to what statement?
4. What's is one final key step in Scheduled Worry-Time?
5. What are key areas that can be included when completing a Conceptualization Worksheet for a veteran client?
6. What can be four steps in turning overwhelming tasks into manageable
achievements?
7. What are three reasons in Cognitive
Processing Therapy (CPT) it is assumed individuals organize information into schemas (categories of information) via the Theoretical Model?
8. What are the five steps in corrective Combat-Related PTSD thinking?
9. What can be five sections in a veterans "Thought-Challenging Record"?
Answers:

A. Noticing when you have drifted away from the observing and sensing mode, into thinking mode. When this happens it is not a mistake, but just acknowledge it has happened, and then gently return
to observing your experience.
B.
Mindful awareness is paying attention in a particular way: on purpose, in the present moment, and nonjudgmentally.
C. At the end of the week, the veteran will look over the list of worries he/she wrote down during their scheduled 15-30 minute Worry-Time. The veteran then ask him/herself... First, "Do I notice any patterns?" -Secondly, "Have there been changes in the content of my worries?"
D. To “shooting was the only option I had.”
E.
1. Choose an activity or goal to break down after looking at all the activities you have scheduled for next week. 2. Break the activity or goal down into smaller steps. 3. Put the steps you’ve come up with into the most logical order. 4. Schedule your first step.
F. Symptoms; Formative Influences; Biological, Genetic and Medical Factors; Situational Issues/Interpersonal Issues; Strengths/Barriers; Core Beliefs; Hypothesis; Veteran’s Goal; and Treatment Plan/Strategies.
G. Monitor your thinking & moods; Seperate your thoughts from triggers and emotions; Indentify thinking errors and distortions; Challenge your thinking and make it more realistic; and Test your underlying belief.
H. To make sense of the world; Interpret new information; and exert some level of prediction and control over their experiences.

If you have problems with Scoring or placing an Order, please contact us at info@mentalhealthce.com