: John F. Kelly, William L. White
: John F. Kelly, William L. White
: Addiction Recovery Management Theory, Research and Practice
: Humana Press
: 9781603279604
: 1
: CHF 104.90
:
: Klinische Fächer
: English
: 326
: Wasserzeichen
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF
Addiction Recovery Management: Theory, Research, and Practice is the first book on the recovery management approach to addiction treatment and post-treatment support services. Distinctive in combining theory, research, and practice within the same text, this ground-breaking title includes authors who are the major theoreticians, researchers, systems administrators, clinicians and recovery advocates who have developed the model. State-of-the art and the definitive text on the topic, Addiction Recovery Management: Theory, Research, and Practice is mandatory reading for clinicians and all professionals who work with patients in recovery or who are interested in the field.
Foreword6
Contents8
Contributors10
Chapter 1: Introduction: The Theory, Science, and Practice of Recovery Management14
Introduction14
References19
Part I: Theoretical Foundations of Recovery Management20
Chapter 2: Addiction Treatment and Recovery Careers21
Introduction21
A Life Course Conceptual Framework22
Drug Use Trajectories23
Drug Use Trajectories Among the General Population24
Drug Use Trajectories Among Drug-Dependent Users25
Distinctive Trajectories Among Drug Users25
Recovery Careers27
Conceptualization and Definitions of Recovery27
Long-Term Follow-Up Studies Informing Recovery28
Predictors of Recovery28
Theory-Based Processes Promoting Recovery30
Addiction Treatment31
Current Treatment Services for Drug Addiction32
Treatment Outcomes and Cumulative Treatment Effects32
Emerging Long-Term Care Models33
Long-Term Care Interventions34
Recovery-Oriented Systems of Care34
Implications and Future Research35
Improving Understanding of Recovery36
Developing Empirically Based Long-Term Care Strategies36
Summary37
References38
Chapter 3: Integrating Addiction Treatment and Mutual Aid Recovery Resources42
Introduction43
Brief History of 12-Step Treatment43
Individual Format44
Project MATCH44
Intensive Referral45
Motivational Interviewing46
Individual TSF for Cocaine Dependence46
Twelve-Step Directive47
Group Format47
Group Project MATCH47
Group TSF for Cocaine Dependence48
Making AA Easier/MAAEZ48
Differences in Sub-group Effects49
Summary of Key Points51
References51
Chapter 4: Processes that Promote Recovery from Addictive Disorders55
Introduction55
Theoretical Perspectives56
Social Control Theory56
Social Learning Theory57
Stress and Coping Theory57
Behavioral Economics and Behavioral Choice Theory57
Active Ingredients of Community Contexts58
Support, Goal Direction, and Structure58
Family Processes58
Friends and Broader Social Contexts59
Abstinence-Oriented Norms and Models60
Family Norms and Models60
Friend and Peer Norms and Models61
Self-Efficacy and Coping Skills61
Rewarding Activities62
Active Ingredients of Self-help Groups63
Support, Goal Direction, and Structure63
Abstinence-Oriented Norms and Models65
Self-Efficacy and Coping65
Rewarding Activities67
Common Components of Stable Recovery68
Future Directions68
Specifying Linkages Between Protective Resources and Recovery69
Clarifying Connections Between Treatment and Protective Resources70
Tailoring Treatment to Strengthen Resources that Promote Recovery70
Conclusion71
Key Points71
References72
Chapter 5: Recovery Management: What If We Really Believed That Addiction Was a Chronic Disorder?77
Introduction78
Addiction as a Chronic Disorder78
Recovery as a Time-Sustained Process80
Evolution of the Acute Care Model of Addiction Treatment81
Recovery Management: Long-Term Recovery as an Organizing Image82
Changes in Service Practices82
Attraction/Access to Treatment83
Assessment and Level of Care Placement84
Composition of the Service Team84
Service Relationships/Roles85
Service Dose, Scope, and Duration86
Locus of Service Delivery86
Linkage to Communities of Recovery87
Posttreatment Monitoring, Support, and Early Reintervention88
Summary89
Key Points89
References90
Part II: Research Approaches and Findings95
Chapter 6: Recovery Management Checkups with Adult Chronic Substance Users96
Introduction97
Challenges for Managing Addiction as a Chronic Condition97
Models of Ongoing Monitoring and Early Reintervention97
Tracking, Assessing, Linking, Engaging, and Retaining98
Study Overview99
Evolution of the RMC Protocol from Experiments 1 to 2100
The TALER Protocol: A Platform for Implementing RMC101
Impact of RMC on the Course of Addiction103
Discussion