Family Support Network for Adolescent Cannabis Users: Cannabis Youth Treatment Series - Volume 3


Book Description

Thus, substance-abusing adolescents experiencing inadequate family structure and functioning will be at a serious disadvantage with regard to recovery. Their recovery, however, is likely to be enhanced if family functioning can be improved. Deficits in family functioning may be related to dimensions of authority, roles, boundaries, communication, and routines. Parental authority may be eroded and roles confused; boundaries may be blurred or violated; communication may be dysfunctional and conflict laden; and family structure or routine may be lacking. Inadequate parenting skills or poor understanding of family dynamics may also contribute to a chaotic or otherwise dysfunctional family context.




The Adolescent Community Reinforcement Approach for Adolescent Cannabis Users (Cannabis Youth Treatment (CYT) Series) - Volume 4.


Book Description

Frequent marijuana use is associated with a syndrome characterized by apathy, decreased attention span, poor judgment, diminished capacity to carry out long-term plans, social withdrawal, and a preoccupation with acquiring marijuana (Cohen, 1980, 1981; Schwartz, 1987). It is also associated with co-occurring problems, including alcohol use, depression, anxiety, attention deficit/hyperactivity, conduct disorder, illegal activity, high-risk sexual activity, unwanted pregnancies, and difficulties at school and home (Donovan & Jessor, 1985; Farrell, Danish & Howard, 1992; Hawkins, Catalano & Miller, 1992; Jessor & Jessor, 1977; Kaminer, 1995; Musty & Kaback, 1995; Rob, Reynolds & Finlayson, 1990). Seventy-nine percent of admissions for primary marijuana problems are treated in outpatient ambulatory settings, that is, about 69 percent in regular outpatient settings (1 to 9 hours per week) and 10 percent...




Multidimensional Family Therapy for Adolescent Cannabis Users - Cannabis Youth Treatment Series (Volume 5)


Book Description

Multidimensional Family Therapy (MDFT)-Multidimensional family therapy is the multisystemic family-focused treatment described in this manual for experienced family therapists that includes 12 weeks of in-clinic and telephone sessions working with individual adolescents and their families. MDFT targets the psychosocial functioning of individual family members, the family members' relationships, and influential social systems outside the family.




Family Support Network for Adolescent Cannabis Users


Book Description

Substance-abusing adolescents experiencing inadequate family structure and functioning will be at a serious disadvantage with regard to recovery. Their recovery, however, is likely to be enhanced if family functioning can be improved. This report explains the family support network (FSN) intervention, which seeks to extend the focus of treatment beyond the world of the adolescent by engaging the family. The FSN model uses only a limited number of the more costly in-home therapy sessions coupled with several less costly group sessions. This approach seeks to engage families in the treatment process, improve parents¿ competence in supporting their child¿s recovery, and shift therapy from formal treatment to a support group for parents. This is a print-on-demand edition of a hard-to-find report.




Adolescent Substance Abuse


Book Description

This book was first published in 2006. Adolescent drug abuse is one of the most challenging disorders to treat. It impacts on schools, community-based programs, mental health and medical facilities, and juvenile justice settings. This book provides practitioners, program developers and policy makers with practical information for improving outcomes in adolescent substance abuse. The authors cover a range of issues, including empirically based treatment development protocols, how to incorporate innovative treatment models into diverse clinical settings; research advances; interventions with special populations, culturally based intervention guidelines, and recommendations for practice and policy.