addiction treatment program
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Author(s):  
Edyta Charzyńska

AbstractThe purpose of this study was to identify distinct profiles of persons beginning alcohol addiction therapy with similar baseline configurations of spiritual coping, forgiveness, and gratitude. The associations between latent profile membership and the completion of therapy were also examined. The sample was composed of 358 alcohol-dependent persons receiving an outpatient treatment program. The Spiritual Coping Questionnaire, the Forgiveness Scale, and the Gratitude Questionnaire were used to assess the baseline levels of spirituality-related variables. Using latent profile analysis, five profiles were identified: (1) both moderately positive and negative dimensions of spirituality (33.2%), (2) moderately positive dimensions of spirituality (21.0%), (3) predominantly negative dimensions of spirituality (20.2%), (4) mixed dimensions of spirituality with the lowest positive religious coping (14.0%), and (5) highly positive dimensions of spirituality (11.6%). Notably, the latent profiles differed in terms of the treatment completion rates. The results suggest the need to carry out a multidimensional assessment of spiritual functioning of persons beginning alcohol addiction therapy to provide treatment that is adjusted to patients’ spiritual potential and deficits.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 204512532098663
Author(s):  
David M. O’Shaughnessy ◽  
Ilana Berlowitz ◽  
Robin Rodd ◽  
Zoltán Sarnyai ◽  
Frances Quirk

Aims: The therapeutic use of psychedelics is regaining scientific momentum, but similarly psychoactive ethnobotanical substances have a long history of medical (and other) uses in indigenous contexts. Here we aimed to evaluate patient outcomes in a residential addiction treatment center that employs a novel combination of Western and traditional Amazonian methods. Methods: The study was observational, with repeated measures applied throughout treatment. All tests were administered in the center, which is located in Tarapoto, Peru. Data were collected between 2014 and 2015, and the study sample consisted of 36 male inpatients who were motivated to seek treatment and who entered into treatment voluntarily. Around 58% of the sample was from South America, 28% from Europe, and the remaining 14% from North America. We primarily employed repeated measures on a psychological test battery administered throughout treatment, measuring perceived stress, craving frequency, mental illness symptoms, spiritual well-being, and physical and emotional health. Addiction severity was measured on intake, and neuropsychological performance was assessed in a subsample from intake to at least 2 months into treatment. Results: Statistically significant and clinically positive changes were found across all repeated measures. These changes appeared early in the treatment and were maintained over time. Significant improvements were also found for neuropsychological functioning. Conclusion: These results provide evidence for treatment safety in a highly novel addiction treatment setting, while also suggesting positive therapeutic effects.


2020 ◽  
Vol Publish Ahead of Print ◽  
Author(s):  
Amelia M. Arria ◽  
Brittany A. Bugbee ◽  
Joel Mader ◽  
Jacqueline M. Smith ◽  
Ken C. Winters

2019 ◽  
pp. 73-89
Author(s):  
Anila Daulatzai

Despite numerous aid programs targeting both widows and heroin users in Afghanistan, a widow and heroin user in Kabul, Aisha, does not receive humanitarian aid and is not part of an addiction treatment program. This chapter looks at forms of kinship that emerge in Aisha’s life amidst serial war in Afghanistan—her relationship to another widow who cares for her, to a wider network of friends, and to heroin. The haalat (situation, condition) of Afghanistan of serial war spanning almost four decades is taken here as an analytical category to unsettle etiologies of addiction, and to critique liberal imaginaries of resilience. By ethnographically exploring the case of Aisha, this chapter asks us to consider the effects of war and humanitarianism on the health of those repeatedly subjected to it and the varied modes of attachment to life that are forged in Afghanistan.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
David C. Jude, MD, FACOG ◽  
◽  
Louis Nieuwenhuizen, PsyD ◽  
Benjamin D. Jude, BS ◽  
Brenda Mitchell, MD, FACOG ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 08 (04) ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Gundel ◽  
Normand Allen III ◽  
Sarah Osborne ◽  
Sahel Shwayhat

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