Rearrange your activities to support recovery: Your lifestyle should support your physical, spiritual, and psychological welfare. Put treatment first: Know your priorities. Make compliance unconditional. Inform others of your plan: Enlist their help in achieving your goals.
Co-Occurring Disorders Step One Worksheet. By Peggy L. Ferguson, Ph.D. Write out a list of problems in your life that have come about because of drinking/using. Write out examples of times when where you have consumed more alcohol or other mood altering drugs than you intended to.
Integrated mental health and substance abuse (MH/SA) treatment for people with co-occurring disorders in the criminal justice system. Gender-sensitive treatment interventions for women in the criminal justice system.
This session reviews important terms, definitions, and concepts about substance use, mental health, and co-occurring disorders. It examines key features of mental health disorders that are common among people with co-occurring disorders.
Co-Occurring Disorders Step One Worksheet By Peggy L. Ferguson, Ph.D. Instructions: Use separate paper or a separate notebook so that you will have plenty of room to write all that comes up in your self-exploration. You may want to use this worksheet on …
A comprehensive evaluation helps target specific areas that must be addressed to increase the probability of recovery. The more issues directly addressed by the treatment team, the more likely a positive outcome can be achieved. This handout will …
This lesson presents information imperative to understanding the complexity of co-occurring disorders and examines three very different approaches to treatment. Learn the strategies effective treatment programs have in common and explore some fundamental therapeutic interventions. Good resources are necessary for good treatment.
Managing Co-Occurring Disorders: A Personal Worksheet. How do you typically cope with stress in your life? Have you noticed any changes in your mental health when using substances? How does your mental health impact your daily life, relationships, and overall well-being?
Each of these five people has what’s called co-occurring disorders (or, sometimes, a dual disorders, a dual diagnosis, a co-morbid condition, or—as some recovering people refer to it—double trouble).
Each topic-specific co-occurring disorders module includes facilitator information (including background information on the disorder) and multiple pages of reproducible client worksheets. The worksheet activities are designed to be engaging, using a variety of learning strategies that will meet the educational needs of all learners.