recovery is described as a deeply personal, unique process of changing one’s attitudes, values,...
TRANSCRIPT
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Recovery is described as a deeply personal, unique process of changing one’s attitudes,
values, feelings, goals, skills, and/or roles. It is a way of living a satisfying, hopeful, and
contributing life even with limitations caused by illness. Recovery involves the development
of new meaning and purpose in one’s life as one grows beyond the catastrophic effects of
mental illness.
A mental health services system that is guided by the recovery vision incorporates the critical services of a community support system organized around the rehabilitation model’s description of the impact of severe mental illness—all under the umbrella of the recovery vision. In a recovery-oriented mental health system, each essential service is analyzed with respect to its capacity to ameliorate people’s impairment, dysfunction, disability, and disadvantage
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Effects Wald Z df F f-indexPercentage of days abstinent from alcohol or other drugs (0–100)
Random intercept 4.87**
Time (4, 729) 1.45**
0.14Condition (3, 318) 1.580.09CBOP (vs. MET/CBT7) (1, 317) 0.12 0.01ACC (vs. w/o ACC) (1, 317) 1.06 0.04ACC × CBOP (1, 317) 3.570.08Time × overall condition (12, 729) 2.03* 0.10Time × CBOP (4, 729) 4.08**
0.08Time × ACC (4, 729) 0.880.04Time × CBOP × ACC (4, 729) 1.14 0.03
Concluded that MET/CBT7 most ‘cost effective’
Godley et al 2010
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Treatment effectiveness
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Intervention effect mediated by ‘ACRA’
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ACRA - resistance
Resistance can be influenced or decreased by a therapist’s behavior and style. It is difficult to provide step-by-step guidance on how a therapist approaches resistance because success in this endeavor is dependent on the total therapeutic approach. The approach should encompass behaviors that convey the most desirable of therapeutic qualities, including listening with empathy; having genuine concern; being open-minded, affirming, reflecting; praising and having expectations; and being accepting and rolling with the resistance. Compliance enhancement strategies begin with the first contact between the therapist and teenager and continue throughout the therapy episode.
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Effect of post-intervention outreach on %/timing readmission rates
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Functional analysis
• Identify triggers• ‘Chaining’• Positive and negative consequences
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Effect of post-intervention outreach on readmission rates
More treatment; more abstinence, less abuse/dependence p<0.05
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Effect of continuing care (post res. -median 4-12 wks) O.R.
Dep. variable predictors High gen comm. care
Abst. 1-3 mos.
Abstained 9-12 mos.
More community care
ACC 3.35
AOD ACC 1.0 1.0
General community care
2.16
Abstinent 1-3 months
11.2
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CYT ‘brief treatment’ evaluation
Alliance• Patient rated therapeutic
alliance (b=.14, .1 3 and 6 mos) and therapist (B=0.1, 3 months p<0.001) predicted rates cannabis use post intervention
Brief treatment
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MI
• McCambridge (2004) comments that ‘MI seeks to promote reflection on drug use and its personal consequences in the context of the values and goals of the individual.’ And
• concludes ‘the tantalizing prospect resulting from this study is that a brief conversation with young people, which is comprehensive in its consideration of drug use, can simultaneously set in motion reductions in risk behaviours across different drugs of use.
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• ‘The therapist also serves as a therapeutic case manager, coordinating and facilitating meetings and/or services for the youth and family based upon a needs assessment.’ (Slesnick et al 2009)
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Brief (16 sessions) Tx runaway alcohol abusing youth
% days using drugs or alcohol
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Brief (16 sessions) Tx runaway alcohol abusing youth
% days using drugs or alcoholOnly 1 of 19 comparisons proved significant
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Cannabis use last 90 days - N = 109