Encouraging posttreatment self-help group involvement to reduce demand for continuing care services: two-year clinical and utilization outcomes.
about
An exploration of the effect of on-site 12-step meetings on post-treatment outcomes among polysubstance-dependent outpatient clientsA Randomized Controlled Trial of Clinician-Supported Problem-Solving Bibliotherapy for Family Caregivers of People With First-Episode PsychosisGamblers Anonymous as a Recovery Pathway: A Scoping ReviewThe Twelve Promises of Alcoholics Anonymous: psychometric measure validation and mediational testing as a 12-step specific mechanism of behavior change.Attitudes towards 12-step groups and referral practices in a 12-step naive treatment culture; a survey of addiction professionals in Norway.Facilitating involvement in Alcoholics Anonymous during out-patient treatment: a randomized clinical trial.Gender differences in mutual-help attendance one year after treatment: Swedish and U.S. samples.Can 12-step group participation strengthen and extend the benefits of adolescent addiction treatment? A prospective analysis.Predictors of longitudinal substance use and mental health outcomes for patients in two integrated service delivery systems.Is level of exposure to a 12-step facilitation therapy associated with treatment outcome?Effectiveness of dual focus mutual aid for co-occurring substance use and mental health disorders: a review and synthesis of the "Double Trouble" in Recovery evaluation.Onset and course of alcoholism over 25 years in middle class men.Estimating the efficacy of Alcoholics Anonymous without self-selection bias: an instrumental variables re-analysis of randomized clinical trials.The role of Alcoholics Anonymous in mobilizing adaptive social network changes: a prospective lagged mediational analysis.Toward enhancing 12-step facilitation among young people: a systematic qualitative investigation of young adults' 12-step experiences.Spirituality in recovery: a lagged mediational analysis of alcoholics anonymous' principal theoretical mechanism of behavior change.Influence of religiosity on 12-step participation and treatment response among substance-dependent adolescents.Determining the relative importance of the mechanisms of behavior change within Alcoholics Anonymous: a multiple mediator analysis.Does sponsorship improve outcomes above Alcoholics Anonymous attendance? A latent class growth curve analysis.How practice and science are balanced and blended in the NIDA Clinical Trials Network: the bidirectional process in the development of the STAGE-12 protocol as an example.Factors associated with first utilization of different types of care for alcohol problems.Evolution of concept, but not action, in addiction treatment.A Combined Group and Individual 12-Step Facilitative Intervention Targeting Stimulant Abuse in the NIDA Clinical Trials Network: STAGE-12.12-Step participation reduces medical use costs among adolescents with a history of alcohol and other drug treatmentStimulant abuser groups to engage in 12-step: a multisite trial in the National Institute on Drug Abuse Clinical Trials NetworkCan Substance Use Disorders be Managed Using the Chronic Care Model? Review and Recommendations from a NIDA Consensus GroupInvolvement in 12-step activities and treatment outcomesDoes Alcoholics Anonymous work differently for men and women? A moderated multiple-mediation analysis in a large clinical sample.Do Drug-Dependent Patients Attending Alcoholics Anonymous Rather than Narcotics Anonymous Do As Well? A Prospective, Lagged, Matching Analysis.12-step interventions and mutual support programs for substance use disorders: an overview.Social recovery model: an 8-year investigation of adolescent 12-step group involvement following inpatient treatment.TREATMENT STAFF REFERRALS, PARTICIPATION EXPECTATIONS, AND PERCEIVED BENEFITS AND BARRIERS TO ADOLESCENT INVOLVEMENT IN 12-STEP GROUPS.The role of mutual-help groups in extending the framework of treatment.Psychiatric comorbidity and 12-step participation: a longitudinal investigation of treated young adultsRecovery benefits of the "therapeutic alliance" among 12-step mutual-help organization attendees and their sponsors.Is Alcoholics Anonymous religious, spiritual, neither? Findings from 25 years of mechanisms of behavior change research.Combining medically assisted treatment and Twelve-Step programming: a perspective and review.Hitting rock bottom? Resource loss as a predictor of alcoholism treatment completion.How do Young Adults View 12-Step Programs? A Qualitative Study.Recovery-oriented policy and care systems in the UK and USA.
P2860
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P2860
Encouraging posttreatment self-help group involvement to reduce demand for continuing care services: two-year clinical and utilization outcomes.
description
2007 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2007年の論文
@ja
2007年学术文章
@wuu
2007年学术文章
@zh
2007年学术文章
@zh-cn
2007年学术文章
@zh-hans
2007年学术文章
@zh-my
2007年学术文章
@zh-sg
2007年學術文章
@yue
2007年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Encouraging posttreatment self ...... ical and utilization outcomes.
@en
Encouraging posttreatment self ...... ical and utilization outcomes.
@nl
type
label
Encouraging posttreatment self ...... ical and utilization outcomes.
@en
Encouraging posttreatment self ...... ical and utilization outcomes.
@nl
prefLabel
Encouraging posttreatment self ...... ical and utilization outcomes.
@en
Encouraging posttreatment self ...... ical and utilization outcomes.
@nl
P2860
P1476
Encouraging posttreatment self ...... ical and utilization outcomes.
@en
P2093
Rudolf H Moos
P2860
P356
10.1111/J.1530-0277.2006.00273.X
P577
2007-01-01T00:00:00Z