Synopsis
Treating Patients With Alcohol and Other Drug Problems: An Integrated Approach points out ways that therapists can deduce whether a client might be abusing drugs. The authors review the etiology of drug dependence and different methods of assessment, the range of treatment approaches and the types of patients appropriate for them, and relapse prevention. Included in the volume are numerous case examples, a list of resources, and an overview of the treatment community (both self-help and professional), which describes the basic assumptions and operating principles of treatment modalities in an effort to minimize the miscommunication that can occur when professionals from different "cultures" attempt to collaborate on patient care.
About the Author
Robert D. Margolis, PhD, is a licensed Clinical Psychologist and has specialized in adolescent addiction and substance abuse since 1977. He is the founder and executive director of Solutions Intensive Outpatient Program, a treatment program for adolescents in Roswell, Georgia. Dr. Margolis was director of psychological services at the Ridgeview Institute from 1984 to 1997.
Dr. Margolis received his undergraduate degree from Duke University and his doctorate in Clinical Psychology from Georgia State University. He completed an APA-approved full-time predoctoral Clinical Psychology Internship from Duke University's Department of Psychiatry/Division of Medical Psychology. He holds the APA College Certificate of Proficiency in the Treatment of Alcohol and Other Psychoactive Substances Use Disorders.
He is a Fellow in APA's Division 50 (Addictions). He has served as a consultant to APA on addiction related matters and has appeared in numerous television documentaries on alcohol and drug abuse problems.
Dr. Margolis has authored more than 15 articles and several book chapters on substance abuse and dependence. In 1997, he co-authored the first edition of this book, Treating Patients with Alcohol and Other Drug Problems: An Integrated Approach, with Joan E. Zweben.
Joan E. Zweben, PhD, is the founder and executive director of the 14th Street Clinic and Medical Group (1979-2007) and the East Bay Community Recovery Project (1989-present) in Oakland, California. The East Bay Community Recovery Project has been providing medical and psychosocial services to alcohol and other drug dependent patients and their families, and is a training site for graduate students and interns in the San Francisco Bay Area. Through these organizations, she has collaborated with researchers locally and nationally since 1981, and has been on the national Steering Committee of the National Institute on Drug Abuse's Clinical Trials Network since 2002.
Dr. Zweben received her undergraduate degree from Brandeis University and her doctorate in clinical psychology from the University of Michigan. She is licensed in California, holds the APA College Certificate of Proficiency in the Treatment of Alcohol and Other Psychoactive Substance Use Disorders, and is a Fellow of APA's Division 50 (Addictions).
Dr. Zweben is the author of 4 books and more than 60 articles and book chapters, and editor of 15 monographs, on treating addiction. She is active in training professionals from a variety of disciplines who work in mental health or addiction treatment settings. She is also Health Sciences Clinical Professor of Psychiatry in the School of Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.
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