- Summary
- Contents
- Subject index
American Journal of Nursing, 2001 Book of the Year Award in Psychiatric & Mental Health Nursing Building upon generic concepts and skills of caring and helping, this book provides a foundation for addiction practice by health and social services professionals. Chapters emphasize the knowledge considered essential in every area, and each chapter identifies the skills required and suggests topics for further study.
Chapter 6: Treatment Methodology
Treatment Methodology
Objectives
- Grasp the concept of methodology.
- Recognize that a treatment methodology is the explicit, purposeful, organized way in which clinicians and clients conduct treatment.
- Understand that clinicians employ a variety of approaches to addiction treatment.
- Compare and contrast different treatment methodologies.
- Identify client and clinician roles in various treatment modalities.
Outline
- Treatment Methodology
- Methodology
- Treatment Approaches
- Client and Clinician Roles
- Natural Recovery
- Approach
- Clients
- Clinicians
- Twelve-Step Recovery
- Approach
- Clients
- Clinicians
- The Minnesota Model
- Approach
- Clients
- Clinicians
- Psychodynamic Approaches to Treatment
- Approach
- Clients
- Dual Disorders
- Denial and Mechanisms of Defense
- Clinicians
- Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies
- Approach
- Clients
- Clinicians
- Motivational Enhancement Therapy
- Approach
- Clients
- Clinicians
- Stages-of-Change Model
- Approach
- Clients
- Clinicians
- Problem-Oriented Treatment
- Approach
- Clients
- Clinicians
- Solution-Focused Treatment
- Approach
- Clients
- Clinicians
- Group Therapy
- Approach
- Psychoeducation Groups
- Mutual Self-Help Groups
- Psychotherapy
- Clients
- Clinicians
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