Active ingredients of substance use-focused self-help groups.
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Smartphone-Based, Self-Administered Intervention System for Alcohol Use Disorders: Theory and Empirical Evidence Basis.Dynamic social networks in recovery homes.Late-life and life history predictors of older adults' high-risk alcohol consumption and drinking problems.What Promotes Wisdom in 12-Step Recovery?Mechanisms of behavior change in alcoholics anonymous: does Alcoholics Anonymous lead to better alcohol use outcomes by reducing depression symptoms?Can 12-step group participation strengthen and extend the benefits of adolescent addiction treatment? A prospective analysis.How do residents of recovery houses experience confrontation between entry and 12-month follow-up?The courage to change: patient perceptions of 12-Step fellowships.Depressive symptoms, friend and partner relationship quality, and posttreatment abstinenceEstimating the efficacy of Alcoholics Anonymous without self-selection bias: an instrumental variables re-analysis of randomized clinical trials.Driving while intoxicated among individuals initially untreated for alcohol use disorders: one- and sixteen-year follow-ups.Motivational intervention to enhance post-detoxification 12-Step group affiliation: a randomized controlled trial.Alcoholics anonymous effectiveness: faith meets scienceSponsorship and service as mediators of the effects of Making Alcoholics Anonymous Easier (MAAEZ), a 12-step facilitation intervention.Impulsivity is an independent predictor of 15-year mortality risk among individuals seeking help for alcohol-related problems.Alcoholics Anonymous attendance, decreases in impulsivity and drinking and psychosocial outcomes over 16 years: moderated-mediation from a developmental perspectiveValidation of the Full and Short-Form Self-Help Involvement Scale Against the Rasch Measurement ModelPredicting patient post-detoxification engagement in 12-step groups with an extended version of the theory of planned behaviorSocial identity, social networks and recovery capital in emerging adulthood: A pilot study.Self-efficacy and social networks after treatment for alcohol or drug dependence and major depression: disentangling person and time-level effects.Mediational relations between 12-Step attendance, depression and substance use in patients with comorbid substance dependence and major depression.Concurrent group treatment for hepatitis C: implementation and outcomes in a methadone maintenance treatment program.Social processes explaining the benefits of Al-Anon participation.Alcoholics Anonymous and reduced impulsivity: a novel mechanism of change.The 10-year course of Alcoholics Anonymous participation and long-term outcomes: a follow-up study of outpatient subjects in Project MATCH.Recovery post treatment: plans, barriers and motivators.The impact of depression on abstinence self-efficacy and substance use outcomes among emerging adults in residential treatment.Factors Affecting the Sustainability of Self-Run Recovery Homes in the United StatesAn Exploratory Investigation of Important Qualities and Characteristics of Alcoholics Anonymous Sponsors.Implementation of a Substance Use Recovery Support Mobile Phone App in Community Settings: Qualitative Study of Clinician and Staff Perspectives of Facilitators and BarriersSocial Networks among Residents in Recovery Homes12-step interventions and mutual support programs for substance use disorders: an overview.Treatment, alcoholics anonymous, and 16-year changes in impulsivity and legal problems among men and women with alcohol use disorders.The role of mutual-help groups in extending the framework of treatment.Does Age Moderate the Effect of Spirituality/Religiousness in Accounting for Alcoholics Anonymous Benefit?Alcohol use among Latinos: a comparison of pre-immigration, post-immigration, and US born LatinosPatients with dual diagnoses or substance use disorders only: 12-step group participation and 1-year outcomes.Commentary on Lopez-Quintero et al. (2011): Remission and relapse - the Yin-Yang of addictive disorders.Rudolf H. Moos on Steven Sussman's "Perspectives of 'functional failure'" psychosocial processes that help overcome functional failure.How many or how much? Testing the relative influence of the number of social network risks versus the amount of time exposed to social network risks on post-treatment substance use.
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Active ingredients of substance use-focused self-help groups.
description
article científic
@ca
article scientifique
@fr
articolo scientifico
@it
artigo científico
@pt
bilimsel makale
@tr
scientific article published on March 2008
@en
vedecký článok
@sk
vetenskaplig artikel
@sv
videnskabelig artikel
@da
vědecký článek
@cs
name
Active ingredients of substance use-focused self-help groups.
@en
Active ingredients of substance use-focused self-help groups.
@nl
type
label
Active ingredients of substance use-focused self-help groups.
@en
Active ingredients of substance use-focused self-help groups.
@nl
prefLabel
Active ingredients of substance use-focused self-help groups.
@en
Active ingredients of substance use-focused self-help groups.
@nl
P2860
P1433
P1476
Active ingredients of substance use-focused self-help groups.
@en
P2093
Rudolf H Moos
P2860
P304
P356
10.1111/J.1360-0443.2007.02111.X
P407
P577
2008-03-01T00:00:00Z