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Basic InformationMore InformationIs Alcohol A Problem?"I have benefited from AA and the 12 Steps... Very much so!"A Better MeetingAA Is To Shame As A Hot Knife Is To ButterAging and Alcohol UseAlcoholic's Anonymous, Outcomes and New Research on AlcoholismAlcoholics Anonymous (AA) is a Cult ?An Alternative to PowerlessnessAttachment to OutcomesAwakeningConcerning Problems Within AADefining and Understanding the Concept of Denial, Addictions and OtherwiseGauging the Effectiveness of One Component of Alcoholics AnonymousHow Drugs Affect The BrainHuffing: Parents and Kids BewareIts Never Too LateLike Phoenix Risen from the Ashes of Addiction, A New Addiction Recovery ProgramNIDA InfoFacts: Drug Abuse and AIDSNIDA InfoFacts: Drug Addiction Treatment MethodsNIDA InfoFacts: Drugged DrivingNIDA InfoFacts: Pregnancy and Drug Use TrendsNIDA InfoFacts: Understanding Drug Abuse and AddictionOn the Question of Medical MarijuanaPain Pills, A Real PainPerverse MotivationRandom Thoughts About Addiction, Delusions and HallucinationsRecoverySelf-EfficacyStaying Sober: Dealing With TemptationsSteering Versus DriftingThe Author of Your FateThe Enlightened PathThe Impeccable PathThe Mentality of ChildhoodThe OPEN PathThe Paradoxical Sinclair Method For Treating Alcohol DependenceTwo MindsWise Counsel Interview Transcript: An Interview with Annie Fahy, MSW on Motivational InterviewingWise Counsel Interview Transcript: An Interview with John C. Fleming, MD on Preventing AddictionWise Counsel Interview Transcript: An Interview with Laurence Westreich, MD on Helping Families Help Addicted MembersWise Counsel Interview Transcript: An Interview with Marc Kern, Ph.D. on Rational Alternatives to Alcoholics AnonymousWise Counsel Interview Transcript: An interview with Morteza Khaleghi, Ph.D. on the Importance of Treating Emotional Trauma in Addiction Wise Counsel Interview Transcript: An Interview with Patt Denning, Ph.D. on Harm Reduction Psychotherapy for Substance Abuse and AddictionWise Counsel Interview Transcript: An Interview with Stefanie Goldstein, Ph.D. on Mindfulness and Addiction TestsLatest NewsIs Alcohol A Problem?Computer-Based Screening May Reduce Teen Substance AbuseTeen Impulsiveness Has Different Sources in ADHD, Substance UseAccelerated Aging Evident in Cocaine-Dependent IndividualsMany Who First Misuse Prescription Pills Get Them From Friends, Family: ReportCocaine Habit Might Speed Brain AgingUse of Ecstasy, Speed by Teens Tied to Later DepressionHalf of Young Cigarette Smokers Also Smoke Pot: Survey12-Step Meetings May Help Teens Beat Alcohol, Drug AbuseAlcohol Use With Opioids Common Even Without Abuse PastSubstance Abusers, Even Recovering Ones, May Face StigmaDrug, Alcohol Abuse Common Among U.S. Teens, Study FindsAlcohol Effects on Brain Activity Vary With Blackout HistoryPrenatal Meth Exposure Linked to Behavioral ProblemsExcessive Drinking Costs U.S. Colleges Millions AnnuallyKids Using Synthetic Pot a Growing Public Health ConcernSpring Break Boozing May Put Young Brains at RiskMany Alcoholics Suffered Childhood Trauma: StudyGenes Play a Role in Drug Abuse Risk Among Adopted Kids: StudyNarcotic Painkillers Another Threat to Traumatized War Vets: StudyDrinking Scenes in Movies May Spur Teens to Do the SameStrict Underage Drinking Laws May Deter Delinquency in TeensEcstasy Use During Pregnancy May Harm Fetus: StudySupport for Tougher Liquor Laws Rises When Booze, Crime LinkedBooze in Movies May Fuel Teenage Drinking1 in 10 U.S. Kids Lives With Parent Who Has Abused Alcohol: ReportStop-Smoking Drug May Also Curb Problem DrinkingIllicit Drugs Bought Off Internet May Be Poisons, Experts WarnHard Drug Use in Middle Age Could Prove Fatal, Study FindsDrinking Late in First Trimester May Be Most HazardousAlcohol Targets Brain 'Reward Centers' in Heavy DrinkersOne in Six Americans Binge Drink: CDCMeth Users Much More Likely to Try SuicideFor Some Couples, Binge Drinking Is RoutineStates Crack Down on Drunk Drivers This Holiday SeasonDrug Overdoses Kill More Americans Than Car Accidents: CDCAlcohol Use Down, Pot Use Up Among U.S. TeensDrunk Driving-Related Deaths Surge During the Holidays'Ecstasy' May Cause Long-Term Changes in Brain ChemistryToo Much Alcohol Linked to Unsafe Sex, Study ConfirmsIf Parents Drink and Drive, Their Kids May Too: StudySmart Kids More Likely to Try Illicit Drugs as Young AdultsHelping Others Helps Teens Beat Substance AbuseDrugs Slipped Into Drinks Sending Many to ER: ReportHeavy Meth Use Linked to Schizophrenia'Fake Marijuana' May Trigger Heart Trouble in TeensMore Than a Third of Teens Turning to Alcohol, Drugs: StudyMore People Landing in the ER After Abusing Muscle Relaxant: ReportDeaths From Abuse of Painkillers Triple in a Decade: CDCNational Drug Take-Back Day Scheduled for Saturday Questions and AnswersLinksBook ReviewsSelf-Help Groups |
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by Robert Holman Coombs (editor) Sage Publications, 2001 Review by Fred Ashmore on Nov 4th 2002 
This is a large heavy book just packed
with information. There are 22
heavyweight articles written by professionals in the field of addiction and
those 410 pages must average 500 words a page.
As an interested amateur I hadnt realised just how many different
flavours there are to treating addiction or addictive behaviours. Heres a list of the articles by heading and
author.
PART
1: MOTIVATIONAL TOOLS
Motivational
Interventions The Only Failure Is the Failure to Act Edward Storti
Motivational
Interviewing: Dancing, Not Wrestling David
B Rosengren, Christopher C Wagner
Computer
Assisted Interventions: Mouse as Cotherapist Christopher
P Rice
PART
II: MEDICAL PHARMACEUTICAL TOOLS
Detoxification:
Opening the Window of Opportunity to Recovery David
E Smith, Richard B Seymour
Medications:
One Tool in the Toolbox Douglas
Ziedonis, Jonathan Krejci
Disease
Orientation: Taking away Blame and Shame Norman
S Miller
Drug
Testing: A Review of Drug Test in Clinical Settings Tom Mieczowski
PART
III: COGNITIVE BEHAVIOURAL TOOLS
Recovery
Contracts: Seven Key Elements G
Douglas Talbott, Linda R Crosby
Contingency
Management: Using Science to Motivate Change Alan
J Budney, Stacey C Sigmon, Stephen T Higgins
Cue
Exposure Treatment: New Thoughts About an Old Therapy Cynthia A Conklin, Stephen T Tiffany
Affect
Regulation Coping Skills Training:
Managing Mood Without Drugs Raymond
L Scott, Marc F Kern, Robert H Coombs
PART
IV: PSYCHOSOCIAL TOOLS
Lifestyle
Planning and Monitoring: Readiness,
Guidance and Growth Fred Zackon
Individual
Therapy: Accomplishing the Tasks of Recovery Joan
E Zweben
Group
Therapy: A Clinicians Guide to Doing What Works Arnold
M Washton
Peer
Support: Key to Maintaining Recovery Linda
Farris Kurtz
Family
Treatment: Stage Appropriate Psychotherapy Joyce
Schmid, Stephanie Brown
PART
V: HOLISTIC TOOLS
Nutritional
Counselling: How to Get the Big High Joseph
D Beasley
Meditation:
The Path to Recovery through Inner Wisdom Carol
A Snarr, Patricia A Norris, Steven L Fahrion
Spirituality
Enhancement: From Distilled Spirits to Instilled Spirit Robert J Kus
Acupuncture:
A Venerable Nonverbal Therapy Michael O
Smith, Kathryn P White
PART
VI: USING RECOVERY TOOLS IN VARIOUS SETTINGS AND PROGRAMS
Harm
Reduction Programs: Progress Rather Than Perfection Arthur W Blume, Britt K Anderson, Jonathan S Fader, G Alan
Marlatt
Matching
Clients with Recovery Tools: Finding the Right Keys to Unlock the Door Reid Hester, Theresa Moyers
Confession: I havent read every chapter but Ive read the vast majority of
them. Overall impression, what a lot of
smart interesting people there are working in this field; what a lot of
different approaches there are; what a dearth there seems to be of
demonstration that any one of them is more effective than any other.
One or other of these authors will back
up pretty much any approach you favour, I suspect. You can find helpful advice, worksheets, statements of medical practice
and suggestions for methods rather outside the normal run such as
acupuncture. I wouldnt be so bold as
to discount any of them. Oh, Ill make
an exception. I found the very first of
these articles Motivational Interventions The Only Failure Is the Failure to
Act full of an infuriating arrogance.
Thank goodness its the exception.
Most of the other articles had more a flavour of This is what I have
found works pretty well, you could try it.
And the final pair of articles seems to serve to pull it all together,
which is a help.
Whos this book for? I think that anyone working with addiction
would find something to stimulate, provoke or intrigue him or her in this. Someone who was trying to recover from
addiction or trying to help someone close to them to recover would, I think,
end up seriously confused about what to do next. This seems very definitely a book for a person who already has
substantial awareness of addiction treatment methods or is a professional in
the field.
© 2002 Fred
Ashmore
Fred Ashmore is a member of the
public with a strong interest in drugs, drink and addiction and how people
recover from them. He is active as a meeting host for the SMART Recovery® program, which offers
help for people who seek to modify harmful and addictive behavior.
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