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Network Therapy for Alcohol and Drug Abuse

Network Therapy for Alcohol and Drug Abuse

Current price: $34.00
Publication Date: February 5th, 1999
Publisher:
The Guilford Press
ISBN:
9781572304413
Pages:
264

Description

Designed for clinical utility, this volume presents an effective approach to engaging addicted people in treatment and helping them maintain abstinence. Well adapted to an office treatment setting and to 12-Step participation, network therapy utilizes family and peer support in conjunction with individual treatment. The book outlines a comprehensive model of addiction, describes how network therapy works, and provides detailed instructions for practice. Clinicians learn to work collaboratively with patients and network members to establish cohesive therapeutic bonds, dispel the stigma of addiction, and help avoid the pitfalls of denial and relapse to substance use. This expanded edition includes empirical validation from research supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse; guidelines for conducting network therapy training, including role-play exercises for students; and reproducible patient education handouts.

About the Author

Marc Galanter, MD, is Professor of Psychiatry at New York University Medical School; Research Scientist at its World Health Organization Collaborating Center; and Director of the Division of Alcoholism and Drug Abuse at NYU and Bellevue Hospital Center. He is also Director of the national Center for Medical Fellowships in Alcoholism and Drug Abuse and Editor of Substance Abuse, the journal of the Association for Medical Education and Research in Substance Abuse.

Praise for Network Therapy for Alcohol and Drug Abuse

"The expanded edition of Network Therapy for Alcohol and Drug Abuse provides new evidence for the advance of network therapy in just a few short years. The book establishes the importance of the natural circle of significant others in the treatment of chemical dependency." --George De Leon, PhD, National Development and Research Institutes, Inc., Center for Therapeutic Community Research, New York City

"Treating addiction is difficult, and available options are often insufficient. I have found network therapy to be a key ingredient in our research project on naltrexone and in my clinical work. The approach is very helpful in improving retention and outcome, and patients and network members alike have found the added support critical. This expanded edition is lucidly written and provides readily accessible methodology, useful case vignettes, and requisite patient handouts. It will be useful for students as well as experienced clinicians." --Herbert D. Kleber, MD, Professor of Psychiatry, Director, Division on Substance Abuse, Columbia University

"Over the past decade, Galanter's network therapy approach has proven to be one of the most exciting new approaches to the treatment of alcohol and drug abuse problems. Its appeal is threefold: it integrates the best of modern ideas about psychosocial and biological treatments for addictive disorders; it mobilizes the potential power of family and friendship networks in support of effective treatment; and it can be easily mastered by both experienced therapists and addiction counselors. The face validity of the network approach, which was apparent from the start, has now been supported by a series of effectiveness studies carried out by Galanter and his colleagues. These studies have convincingly demonstrated that network therapy is the equal of any existing psychosocial treatment for addictive disorders in keeping people drug-free. Further, the studies have laid out a road map for how to train therapists in this exciting method. This expanded edition not only includes succinct summaries of Galanter's outcome findings, but also provides a wealth of techniques and strategies for how to deal with some of the toughest problems associated with the treatment of serious addictive disorders. It can serve as a manual for any therapist wanting to add network therapy to his or her armamentarium of treatment approaches for alcohol and drug abuse problems." --Peter Steinglass, MD, Executive Director, Ackerman Institute for the Family, New York City