A psychiatric rehabilitation diagnosis focuses on identifying an individual’s strengths, needs, and aspirations to guide recovery-oriented planning, distinct from a clinical diagnosis. The CPRP Exam Blueprint (Domain IV: Assessment, Planning, and Outcomes) outlines the components as a functional assessment (to identify strengths and deficits), a resource assessment (to evaluate available supports), and an overall rehabilitation goal (to set a person-centered objective) (Task IV.A.1: "Conduct functional assessments to identify individual goals and strengths" and Task IV.A.3: "Assess available resources to support goal attainment"). Option A (resource assessment, functional assessment, and an overall rehabilitation goal) aligns with this framework, capturing the holistic, recovery-focused approach of psychiatric rehabilitation.
Option B (social skill assessment, psychiatric diagnosis, rehabilitation goal) is incorrect, as psychiatric diagnosis is clinical and not part of rehabilitation diagnosis, and social skills are a subset of functional assessment. Option C (readiness assessment, skill management, resource evaluation) mixes assessment and intervention terms, missing the goal component. Option D (functional assessment, diagnostic assessment, skill programming) includes clinical diagnostic assessment, which is not relevant, and skill programming is an intervention, not a diagnostic component. The PRA Study Guide details these components as essential for rehabilitation planning, supporting Option A.
[:, CPRP Exam Blueprint (2014), Domain IV: Assessment, Planning, and Outcomes, Tasks IV.A.1 and IV.A.3., PRA Study Guide (2024), Section on Psychiatric Rehabilitation Diagnosis., CPRP Exam Preparation & Primer Online 2024, Module on Assessment, Planning, and Outcomes., , ]