39. For adolescents specifically, according to the National Comorbidity Survey Replication Adolescent Supplement, 62 percent have experienced a traumatic event; however, rates of PTSD were only 4.7 percent. 40. PTSD is the only disorder to have as a result of trauma. 41. PTSD can present as ADHD, ODD, depression and bipolar, therefore carefully reviewing the symptoms can help distinguish the proper diagnosis. 42. When treating PTSD, all exposure methods, however, share a common feature: the client confronts threatening stimuli until the anxiety is reduce. 43. When was PTSD added to the DSM? 44. The lifetime prevalence of bulimia is ___% of the population. 45. The average age for bulimia and anorexia is 18.9. 46. Involvement in certain activities that emphasize very low body fat, such as certain sports and dance, places an individual at risk for eating disorders. 47. Suicide is not a risk of eating disorders. 48. Partial hospitalization is the first-line treatment for eating disorders. 49. Despite research, experienced clinicians do not find CBT as a useful as described in research for treating eating disorders. 50. One of the challenges faced by those involved in preventing eating disorders is the difficulty of changing the dieting and weight preoccupations that are so culturally pervasive.
SOWK 431 Quiz 3 Conduct Disorders to Personality Disorders 1. Social workers should only interview parents when assessing for ODD or CD. 2. In regards to ODD and CD, when a child has had a recent stressful life event, social workers should consider: 3. Approximately _____ percent of youths with ODD will later develop CD. 4. Which of the follow interventions are shown to be effective? 5. Which of the following is a common comorbid disorder with ODD and CD? 6. Oppositional behaviors should be distinguished from disruptive behaviors associated with ADHD, which occur in response to frustrations associated with inattention and hyperactivity 7. Living in poor and disadvantaged communities poses substantial risks for antisocial behavior in children in terms of unemployment, community disorganization, availability of drugs, the presence of adults involved in crime, community violence, and racial prejudice. 8. Medication cannot help youth with CD or ODD. 9. Females may be underrecognized for CD because the presentation of CD is less noticeable. 10. Which of the following is a critique to the DSM V’s ODD and CD disorders? 11. If a client presented with the following symptoms, which disorder would you evaluate for: A repetitive and persistent pattern of behavior in which the basic rights of others or major ageappropriate societal norms or rules are violated, as manifested by the presence of at least three of the following criteria: Aggression to people and animals, destruction of property, deceitfulness or theft, and serious violations of rules. 12. The essential feature of oppositional defiant disorder is frequent and persistent pattern of angry/irritable mood, argumentative/defiant behavior, or vindictiveness. 13. he first symptoms of oppositional defiant disorder usually appear during the early adolescence years and rarely in the early preschool years. 14. ODD is persistent throughout development, individuals with this disorder experience frequent conflicts with parents, teachers, supervisors, peers, and romantic partners. 15. The essential feature of conduct disorder is repetitive and persistent patterns of behavior in which the basic rights of others or major age-appropriate societal norms or rules are violated. 16. The intervention of social information process for CD or ODD involves all of the following except: 17. Substance use disorders are the first most diagnosed group of disorder in the United States.