NCTRC- Practice of Therapeutic Recreation/Recreation Therapy

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C. The holistic approach to TR/RT
Which concept of TR/RT places the most emphasis on addressing all of an individual's needs?

A. TR/RT as recreative experience
B. Special or adaptive recreation
C. The holistic approach to TR/RT
D. TR/RT as a treatment modality
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C. Community Inclusion
Which NCTRC speciality certification area of practice can encompass populations from all the others?

A. Physical Medicine/Rehabiliation
B. Developmental Disabilites
C. Community Inclusion
D. Behavioral Health
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C. The Long-term care model
Which of the following models of TR/RT LEAST follows a continuum of increasing independence for the participant?

A. The Treatment models
B. The Leisure Ability model
C. The Long-term care model
D. The Activity Therapy model
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C. The Long-Term Care model
In the practice settings of group homes and prisons, which TR/RT model is most likely?

A. The Medical/Clinical model
B. The Milieu Therapy model
C. The Long-Term Care model
D. Education/Training model
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C. Assessment
The RT gathers culturally appropriate baseline data on patient/client strengths and weaknesses in physical, cognitive, emotional, behavioral, social, and leisure functioning. This is an example of which of the ATRA standards of practice?

A. Treatment planning
B. Ethical conduct
C. Assessment
D. Discharge
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B. Justice
RTs are responsible for seeing that clients receive equal services regardless of finanicial status, social status, disability, disease, race, color, creed, gender, age, or sexual orientation. Which principle in the ATRA Code of Ethics reflects this?

A. Fidelity
B. Justice
C. Veracity
D. Autonomy
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A. Principle 2, Non-Maleficence
Which principle(s) of the ATRA Code of Ethics for RT personnel stipulate(s) that they protect the people they serve from harm?

A. Principle 2, Non-Maleficence
B. Principle 10, Compliance
C. Principle 1, Beneficence
D. Principles 1 and 2
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C. Veracity
If, for fear of discouraging the client, the recreational therapist omitted a little information about the client's prognosis in RT, this would violate which principle of the ATRA Code of Ethics?

A. None
B. Fidelity
C. Veracity
D. Justice
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A. Psychosocial
When assessing a client/patient, in which domain would the person's level of engagement belong?

A. Psychosocial
B. Affective
C. Cognitive
D. Physical
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B. Affective
By observing a person's bodily gestures, facial expressions, and estimating the person's relative level of self-esteem, which domain of behavior can the RT best assess?

A. Psychosocial
B. Affective
C. Cognitive
D. Physical
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B. More than half of physical therapists, like RT's, do not employ commercial standardized assessments
What is the most accurate about assessment practices by RTs and other therapeutic fields?

A. About half of RT's use commercial standardized tests like CERT, FOX, REDS, LCM, LDB, or Leisurescope
B. More than half of physical therapists, like RT's, do not employ commercial standardized assessments
C. Some research finds mental health professionals monitor progress using only standardized measures
D. TR is unique among therapeutic fields in its practitioners' lack of using available standardized testing
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D. Clinical judgement rather than clinical evaluation
Currently, the majority of practicing RT's are more likely to use which of these in assessment?

A. Neither clinical evaluation nor clinical judgement
B. Clinical evaluation and judgement in combination
C. Clinical evaluation rather than clinical judgement
D. Clinical judgement rather than clinical evaluation
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A. The Leisure Constraints Index (L-CON)
Which part of the Leisure Assessment Inventory or LAI (Hawkins et, al 2002) helps the RT to determine how a client is limited from participating in certain leisure activities?

A. The Leisure Constraints Index (L-CON)
B. The Leisure Activity Participation Index (LAP)
C. The Leisure Preference Index (L-PREF)
D. The Leisure Interest Index (L-INT)
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D. It measures what it means and claims to measure
If an assessment instrument is valid, what does this mean?

A. It produces stable results when reused over time
B. It means the test will accomplish both A and D
C. It means something other than A, B, and/or D
D. It measures what it means and claims to measure
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A. Content validity
Whether a test represents everything in the construct or behavior being measured is called:

A. Content validity
B. Construct validity
C. Convergent validity
D. Discriminant validity
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B. Concurrent validity
Test authors want to validate their updated new version of an instrument. They give the old version to one group of students, and give the new version to another group of students at the same time. What kind of validity are they trying to establish?

A. Predictive validity
B. Concurrent validity
C. Construct validity
D. Content validity
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B. All these types of reliability
Which of the following types of reliability is/are determined by computing a correlation coefficient?

A. Test-retest reliability
B. All these types of reliability
C. Equivalent forms reliability
D. Split-half reliability
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A. A constant error
An error of measurement that makes a test instrument less valid is what kind of error?

A. A constant error
B. A random error
C. Neither of these
D. Either of these
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D. Split-half reliability
Which of the following types of test reliability can be established with only one test administration?

A. Alternate-forms reliability
B. Test-retest reliability
C. All these types can
D. Split-half reliability
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C. Purpose
If the RT wants to determine which activities a client can participate in and gives a Leisure Interests assessment that reveals the client has a strong interest in a particular activity that s/he is permanently unable physically to participate in, this relates to which criterion for selecting the assessment?

A. Availability
B. Validity
C. Purpose
D. Reliability
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A. Reviewing the test protocol; analyzing the results; interpreting the results; documenting
In implementing assessment for TR/RT, which choices gives some of the steps in the correct order?

A. Reviewing the test protocol; analyzing the results; interpreting the results; documenting
B. Documenting; interpreting the results;analyzing the results; reviewing the test protocol
C. Analyzing the results; reviewing the test protocol; documenting; analyzing the results
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A. Structured
Which types of interview is most likely to include "Yes/No" questions?

A. Structured
B. Unstructured
C. Semi-structured
D. All are equally likely
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B. Sensory
When assessing whether a patient can read or is legally blind, whether the patient's hearing is within normal limits, and whether the patient is tactile-defensive, which domain is being assessed?

A. Cognitive
B. Sensory
C. Physical
D. Social
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C. Leisure barriers
Assessment of physical, mental, emotional, behavioral, or social constraints to leisure activity relates most to assessment of:

A. Leisure skils
B. Leisure values
C. Leisure barriers
D. Leisure intertests
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D. Psychiatric
The Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) from DSM-IV-TR is considered what kind of assessment?

A. Long-Term Care
B. Neurological
C. Functional
D. Psychiatric
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B. Not allowing the patient to sit for long times without a release of pressure
For a patient with loss of sensation secondary to diabetes, which of the following is an example that the RT anticipates a contraindication based on the patient's diagnosis?

A. Not allowing the patient to engage in physical exercise to prevent fatigue
B. Not allowing the patient to sit for long times without a release of pressure
C. Not allowing the patient to eat any food before or after physical activities
D. Not allowing the patient to engage in activities if blood sugar tests normal
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B. The patient may have any/all of these side-effects
Which of the following should the RT consider when working with patients who take seizure medications?

A. The patient may have trouble following directions
B. The patient may have any/all of these side-effects
C. The patient may be dizzy and lacking coordination
D. The patient may be short of breath and faint
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D. The report helps an RT set TR goals consistent with a lead doctor's treatment goals
What is accurate about Intake Assessment Report in the field of TR/RT?

A. Only a certain approved professional can generate the intake assessment report
B. In community settings, a doctor's prescription takes precedence over this report
C. It is unlikely to inform the RT's identifying suitable interview topics and questions
D. The report helps an RT set TR goals consistent with a lead doctor's treatment goals
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B. Comparison of current measures to baseline measures
When reporting an RT patient's progress, which of these is the most objective basis?

A. The RT's intuitive sense that the patient has improved
B. Comparison of current measures to baseline measures
C. Consensus on the treatment team of patient progress
D. The patient's self-report of experiencing improvement
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B. The Annual/Change of Condition/Re-admit Assessment for adjusting the TR programs
The Measurable Assessment in Recreation for Resident- Centered Care (MARRCC) is designed for RT's working in long-term care settings and has four sections. Which section helps RTs to monitor changes in a resident's level of functioning?

A. The Intake Assessment measuring functioning levels in four recreation-related domains
B. The Annual/Change of Condition/Re-admit Assessment for adjusting the TR programs
C. The Care Plan Section to write measurable, problem-related, resident-centered goals
D. The Progress Note Section to evaluate resident progress and care plan effectiveness
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A. In the "A" part
In the SOAP charting method, where would the physician's diagnosis of the patient's problem be?

A. In the "A" part
B. In the "S" part
C. In the "P" part
D. In the "O" part
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A. O of SOAP
"Pt. is 72-yr.-old male, 6'1", 172 lbs." This note would be charted where according to the SOAP method?

A. O of SOAP
B. P of SOAP
C. A of SOAP
D. S of SOAP
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B. To make measurements and data of disability and rehabiliation more uniform
What was the purpose for developing the Functional Independence Measure (FIM)?

A. To increase the options for types of disability and rehabiliation measurement
B. To make measurements and data of disability and rehabiliation more uniform
C. To generate larger amounts of disability and rehabiliation measurement data
D. To make the measurement of disability and rehabiliation data more versatile
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D. It can be completed in any of these manners
Which of the following is true about the Functional Independence Measure (FIM)?

A. It can be completed only through a conference
B. It can be completed only through observations
C. It can be completed via telephone interviews
D. It can be completed in any of these manners
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C. (A) and (B)
What dimensions have been identified in the Functional Independence Measure (FIM)?

A. Motor
B. Cognitive
C. (A) and (B)
D. Psychosocial
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A. What instruments will measure progress but not patient awareness
When RT's (or anyone) write measurable objectives for a patient care plan, they should identify who the patient is. What else should they include and not include?

A. What instruments will measure progress but not patient awareness
B. When results are expected but criteria for results are not necessary
C. What results are desired rather than how they should be measured
D. What criteria are identified for success but not when it should occur
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C. Eating at restaurants
According to the U.S. Census for 2010, which of the following leisure activities had the largest percentage of American adults participated in at least once over the part year?

A. Playing backgammon
B. Entertaining at home
C. Eating at restaurants
D. Reading for pleasure
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C. Producing outcomes for clients
In recent years, the most emphasis in selecting specific TR activities for clients has been on:

A. Providing activities to the client
B. Providing enjoyment to a client
C. Producing outcomes for clients
D. All these are equally important
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C. Intelligibility
Which of these is NOT one of three important concepts associated with activity analysis and selecting TR activities for clients?

A. Causality
B. Replicability
C. Intelligibility
D. Predictability
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A. People with disabilites can water-ski with modifications
People with spinal cord injuries can participate in rafting; and they can enjoy kayaking or canoeing with only minimal adaptations. Which of the following is true about other water sports for people with spinal disabilities?

A. People with disabilites can water-ski with modifications
B. There is no group that teaches that disabled scuba diving
C. No known modifications exists for sailing by the disabled
D. Disabled people require no adaptations to enjoy rowing
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C. Assertiveness training
For a client who knows how to perform many different leisure activities and cooperates and interacts well with others, but is timid about initiating group activities and wants to improve leadership behaviors, which type of RT intervention would be most appropriate?

A. Leisure skills development
B. Training for social skills
C. Assertiveness training
D. Stress Mangement
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B. Learning to advocate for oneself is included in leisure education
When patients have sustained disabling injuries, which of these is true about the leisure education their RT can give them?

A. Those with good prior problem-solving skills need no new ones
B. Learning to advocate for oneself is included in leisure education
C. RTs can teach disability rights, but not coping with discrimination
D. RTs teach time and energy management rather than adjustment
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C. Exclusion of certain groups on the basis of medical history is necessary
Regarding the nature and diversity of recreation and leisure activities, what is NOT accurate?

A. It is not acceptable to exclude people based on their race or ethnicity
B. It is never acceptable to exclude anyone by gender/sexual orientation
C. Exclusion of certain groups on the basis of medical history is necessary
D. Individuals or groups must not be excluded due to employment status
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A. TR/RT as inclusive recreation
Of the following concepts, which would be most related to enabling people with disabilites to participate in the same activities as the non-disabled in the same school class or community group?

A. TR/RT as inclusive recreation
B. TR/RT as treatment modality
C. TR/RT as a recreative process
D. TR/RT from holistic approach
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C. The Leisure Ability Model
Which of the following models of TR/RT features four steps and moves from maximum to minimum control by the therapist?

A. The Health Protection/Promotion Model
B. The TR Service Delivery Model
C. The Leisure Ability Model
D. The Ecological Model
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C. Self-actualization
Among the following psychology concepts, which one is most emphasized by the Health Protection/Health Promotion model of TR/RT?

A. Learned helplessness
B. Intrinsic motivation
C. Self-actualization
D. Locus of control
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A. RTs may practice in all of these
Of the following, which is/are (a) setting(s) where RT's would NOT practice?

A. RTs may practice in all of these
B. In the public school systems
C. In psychiatric facilites
D. In client's homes
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D. Staff Qualifications, Competency Assessment
Which of the following ATRA Standards for the Practice of TR is represented by a TR Department's providing its employees with opportunities for professional development?

A. Quality Management
B. Written Plan of Operation
C. Program Evaluation and Research
D. Staff Qualifications, Competency Assessment
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D. Informed Consent
RT's must provide prospective clients/patients with information that allows them to make decisions about accepting or declining treatment. To which principle of the ATRA Code of Ethics does this relate most?

A. Beneficence
B. Competence
C.Confidentiality
D. Informed Consent
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B. This would violate the ATRA Code of Ethics Principle 5, Fidelity
If a practitioner of TR/RT very frequently cancels appointments with a client, which of the following is true?

A. This could violate the ATRA Code of Ethics Principle 6. Veracity
B. This would violate the ATRA Code of Ethics Principle 5, Fidelity
C. This reflects time management issues, not an ethical violation
D. This directly violates ATRA Ethics Principle 2, Maleficence
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B. Endurance
For assessing a client/patient's physical functioning, which component reflects his/her relative ability to withstand exertion over periods of time?

A. Balance
B. Endurance
C. Activity Level
D. Coordination
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A. Strength
Assessment of which aspect of physical functioning is most closely associated with a person's flexibility for stretching and bending?

A. Strength
B. Wellness
C. Endurance
D. Coordination
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B. Client improvement cannot be measured without baseline measured by standardized assessments
Which of the following is most accurate about assessment in RT?

A. The vast majority of RTs routinely use standardized interviews to screen leisure history and interests
B. Client improvement cannot be measured without baseline measured by standardized assessments
C. Among RT's, most have thorough educations in standardized assessment tools for the practice or TR.
D. RTs commonly assess specific functioning areas and targeted treatments utilizing standardized tools
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C. More than one ATRA Standard for Practice relates to assessment in some way
What is true about the ATRA Standards for Practice regarding assessments of clients?

A. ATRA Standards for Practice do not specifically include anything on assessment
B. The ATRA only discusses assessment separately from its Standard of Practice
C. More than one ATRA Standard for Practice relates to assessment in some way
D. ATRA Standards for Practice are meant for treatment rather than assessment
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C. The CERT-Physical Disabilites
Which of the following assessment instruments measure a client's functional skills?

A. Parts of the Idyll Arbor Leisure Battery
B. FOX Activity Therapy Skills
C. The CERT-Physical Disabilites
D. The CERT-PSYCH-R
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B. None of these is true about the Therapeutic Recreation Activity Assessment
What is true about the Therapeutic Recreation Activity Assessment (TRAA)?

A. It measures gross and fine motor skills, but does not assess social behaviors
B. None of these is true about the Therapeutic Recreation Activity Assessment
C. It tests motor skills and social behaviors, but it excludes communication skills
D. It measures motor, social, and communication skills but omits cognitive skills
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A. The instrument is reliable
If an assessment instrument can be repeated over time in multiple administration and yield stable results, what does this mean statistically?

A. The instrument is reliable
B. The instrument is valid
C. It is reliable and valid
D. It is none of these
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D. How well a test measures an abstract idea (example: intelligence)
Which of the following is a definition of construct validity?

A. How well a test represents the entire subject or construct it tests
B. How well a test's current scores show what future scores will be
C. How well a test's score relate to a similar test's at the same time
D. How well a test measures an abstract idea (example: intelligence)
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C. Predictive validity
When a scientist statistically computes a correlation coefficient to assess the validity of a test instrument for measuring the thing if it is meant to measure, what kind of validity is this?

A. Face validity
B. Construct validity
C. Predictive validity
D. Concurrent validity
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C. Random errors
Which kind of measurement errors will affect the reliability of a test?

A. Constant errors
B. Both of these
C. Random errors
D. Neither of these
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B. Test-retest reliability
Which type of reliability is most likely to be affected if the test-taker has grown older and/or learned more between administrations, and/or remembers material from taking the same test previously?

A. Inter-rater reliability
B. Test-retest reliability
C. Alternate-forms reliability
D. Internal consistency reliability
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A. Rationale equivalence reliability
Which of the following kinds of test reliability is NOT established by computing correlation?

A. Rationale equivalence reliability
B. Equivalent-forms reliability
C. Test-retest reliability
D. Split-half reliability
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B. Practically
If the RT selects an assessment that is very thorough and requires the test-taker to focus attention for long periods of time; and wants to administer it to a child who is young and/or diagnosed with ADHD, to which criterion for assessment selection does this relate?

A. Availability
B. Practically
C. Reliability
D. Purpose
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C. The patient's attention span in terms of its length
Related to assessment of a patient/client, which of the following would LEAST involve a behavioral observation?

A. The patient's amount and kinds of motor activity
B. The patient's body language and what it conveys
C. The patient's attention span in terms of its length
D. The patient's interpersonal and social interactions
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B. Functional assessments
The Ohio Scale of Leisure Functioning (OFA), the Comprehensive Evaluation for Recreational Therapy (CERT), and the Assessment of Characteristics of Therapeutic Recreation (FACTR) are examples of:

A. Leisure assessments
B. Functional assessments
C. Neurological assessments
D. Rehabiliation assessments
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B. Cognitive
The RT is testing a patient's awareness of danger and ability to care for himself or herself. In which functional domain does this part of the assessment belong?

A. Emotional
B. Cognitive
C. Sensory
D. Physical
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C. Stimulus avoidance
A client finds leisure activity a way to escape from a stressful job. Which of the four primary leisure motivation does this reflect?

A. Competence mastery
B. Intellectual motivation
C. Stimulus avoidance
D. Social motivation
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C. The medical charts
Which of these would likely be the RT's best source of assessment data for determining how many times a patient has had surgery for the same chronic condition affecting physical activity?

A. The family history
B. Family Interviews
C. The medical charts
D. The team members
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B. Exercise rehabiliation has been shown to help physical and neurological function and quality of life
What has research shown about exercise therapy for patients with Multiple Sclerosis (MS)?

A. Exercise rehabiliation has been shown to exacerbate
B. Exercise rehabiliation has been shown to help physical and neurological function and quality of life
C. Exercise rehabiliation has been shown to increase the rates of relapse for Multiple Sclerosis clients
D. Exercise rehabiliation has been shown to reverse the progression of neurological impairment in MS
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B. These are common side-effects of many seizure medications
If a patient has a seizure disorder and displays poor coordination, an unsteady gait, slurred speech, confusion; and becomes aggressive, which of the following should the RT consider first?

A. These are common symptoms of alcohol and drug addictions
B. These are common side-effects of many seizure medications
C. These are common symptoms of certain mental health issues
D. These are common side-effects of having any seizure disorder
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B. The scores must be interpreted using norm-referenced or criterion-referenced methods
When interpreting the scores of a published standardized assessment, which of these is correct?

A. The scores must be interpreted via norm-referenced, not criterion-referenced methods
B. The scores must be interpreted using norm-referenced or criterion-referenced methods
C. The scores must be interpreted via criterion-referenced, not norm-referenced methods
D. The scores must be interpreted by the RT but need not be norm-or criterion-referenced
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A. Measurement of Social Empowerment and Trust (SET) evaluates changes in a patient's social skills and social attitudes as results of treatment.

The Leisure Satisfaction Measure assess how well a person feels his/her needs are met by leisure activity.

The Leisure Interest Measure identifies relative interest for activities in each of eight leisure activity domains

The Leisure Motivation Scale assess what areas (intellectual, social, competence-mastery, and/or stimulus-avoidance) motivate an individual to engage in leisure activities rather than treatment programs
Which of the following assessment instruments would be most informative specifically for evaluating a patient's progress in treatment?

A. Measurement of Social Empowerment and Trust
B. The Leisure Satisfaction Measure
C. The Leisure Interest Measure
D. The Leisure Motivation Scale
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A. Adjustment to care plan to meet changed resident needs
In the Measurable Assessment in Recreation for Resident-Centered Care (MARRCC) 2, the section called the Annual/Change of Condition/Re-Admit Assessment is most appropriate for which of these?

A. Adjustment to care plan to meet changed resident needs
B. Evaluation of a resident's initial recreation-related functions
C. Evaluation of resident progress toward the care plan's goals
D. Assessment of the effectiveness of the individual care plan
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C. In the same place where the doctor charts prescriptions
In the SOAP method of charting, where would the RT place notes about which activities to use with a patient?

A. In the same place where the doctor notes the diagnosis
B. In the same place where prior treatments/providers are
C. In the same place where the doctor charts prescriptions
D. In the same place where a patient pain rating is charted
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A. In the "S" section

The date of onset of an injury and the way that it occurred would be entered in the "S" or Subjective section of SOAP notes.

This section also includes the chronology of the problem (i.e. etc); quality and severity of pain; factors that make it better or worse; other symptoms; and other providers and treatments involved

The "O" or /Objective section includes factual measurements like vital signs, physical examination results, laboratory test values,; age. height, weight etc

The "A" or Assessment section includes physicians' notes of medical diagnoses they made and conclusions of health care team members based on patient data they have reviewed

The "P" or Plan section includes notes by all involved healthcare professionals of what treatments they plan for the patient
The RT is reading in a chart the date when a patient sustained an injury and how it happened. According to the SOAP method of documentation, where would this note be entered?

A. In the "S" section
B. In the "O" section
C. In the "A" section
D. In the "P" section
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B. 18
The Functional Independence Measure (FIM) contains how many total items?

A. 36
B. 18
C. 07
D. 30
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D. It identifies patient changes during inpatient rehabiliation programs
Which of the following is true about the Functional Independence Measure (FIM)?

A. It has been statistically found reliable but not also found to be valid
B. It has been statistically found valid nut not also found to be reliable
C. It is particularly specific to diagnosis of traumatic brain injuries (TBI)
D. It identifies patient changes during inpatient rehabiliation programs
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A. Reversible, permanent, or progressive, neurological, musculoskeletal and others
The Functional Independence Measure (FIM) is designed for evaluating the areas of dysfunction that people experience in activities when they have which kinds of disorders?

A. Reversible, permanent, or progressive, neurological, musculoskeletal and others
B. Permanent, reversible, or progressive; and musculoskeletal , but not neurological
C. Musculoskeletal and neurological; permanent and reversible but not progressive
D. Progressive and permanent, not reversible; neurological and not musculoskeletal
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B. "When asked, the client will climb in a cave using the climbing technique as taught"
In an outdoor RT program for teens with psychiatric, emotional, behavior and/or addiction disorders, which of the following is the best example of a behavioral objective?

A. "The client will demonstrate the ability to climb inside of a cave in a safe manner"
B. "When asked, the client will climb in a cave using the climbing technique as taught"
C. "When inside of a cave, the client will know the proper climbing technique to use"
D. "The client will understand the proper techniques to use for climbing inside caves"
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B. Cooking for fun
The results of the U.S. Census for fall 2010 show that which of the following was done during the previous year by the most American adults as a leisure pursuit?

A. Going on picnics
B. Cooking for fun
C. Bars/Nightclubs
D. Out barbecuing
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B. Building a birdhouse for a client goal to follow directions in sequence
In making an activity analysis to choose RT activities for an individual client, which example is the most appropriate choice?

A. Playing hames of tag for a client goal to follow directions in sequence
B. Building a birdhouse for a client goal to follow directions in sequence
C. Building a birdhouse for a client goal to improve skills for socialization
D. Playing basketball toward a client goal to improve skills for socializing
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B. Hand-over-hand
Which faciliation technique would be most apporaite for the RT to use for crafts with a client who has motor apraxia?

A. Reality therapy
B. Hand-over-hand
C. Step sequencing
D. Cognitive reframing
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B. Creative writing
For people with disabilites who are wheelchair-bound, which recreational activity is most likely to involve additional assistive computer technology?

A. Reading books
B. Creative writing
C. Going to movies
D. Watching the TV
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C. Systematic desensitization; gradually reduces fear/avoidance of stimuli through successive approximations (i.e. small steps) toward the dreaded stimulus
Which of the following behavior modification techniques would be most helpful for a client with agoraphobia?

A. Differential reinforcement of incompatible behavior (DRI)
B. Differential reinforcement of other behavior (DRO)
C. Systematic desensitization
D. Positive Reinforcement
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A. Researchers have identified all of these as applications of leisure counseling.
In which of the following ways has leisure counseling been identified as a valuable psychotherapeutic tool?

A. Researchers have identified all of these as applications of leisure counseling.
B. Easing symptoms of phobias, panic attacks, or post-traumatic stress disorder
C. Controlling and/or inhibiting obsessive, compulsive, and addictive behaviors
D. Helping patients in establishing and maintaining positive moods and feelings
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D. Activities that make us examine all of these
Relative to the nature and diversity of recreation and leisure activities, what should RTs include in their program to promote their advocacy for all kinds of people?

A. Activities that makes us examine biases
B. Activities that make us examine phobias
C. Activities that make us examine prejudices
D. Activities that make us examine all of these