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CHAPTER 8: Group Treatment. Substance Abuse Counseling: Theory and Practice Fifth Edition Patricia Stevens Robert L. Smith Prepared by: Dr. Susan Rose, University of the Cumberlands. Overview of Chapter. Introduction Evolution of Group Treatment Group Dynamics, Process and Structure
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CHAPTER 8:Group Treatment Substance Abuse Counseling: Theory and Practice Fifth Edition Patricia Stevens Robert L. Smith Prepared by: Dr. Susan Rose, University of the Cumberlands
Overview of Chapter • Introduction • Evolution of Group Treatment • Group Dynamics, Process and Structure • Group Treatment in the Continuum of Care • Pragmatics of Group Treatment • Group Treatment Efficacy
Introduction • Group treatment is the most common modality for the delivery of services to individuals and families recovering from substance use disorders. • Psychoeducational groups can provide means for learning information about addiction as well as social and coping skills needed to reduce risk of relapse. • Self-help groups cultivate hope. • Best outcomes involve matching clients with stages of change, intervention, or counselor characteristics. • Early identification and intervention with at-risk adolescents can disrupt the progression of problems with addictive disorders.
Group Dynamics, Process and Structure: Stages of Group Development
Group Dynamics, Process and Structure: Structural Considerations • Voluntary participation? • Receptivity or Amenability to Treatment • Attrition • Major contributing factor: Failure to attend to multicultural concerns
Group Treatment in the Continuum of Care • Continuum of Care: represents a response of behavioral healthcare to demands for matching patient needs to effective modalities of treatment • Prevention • Prevention groups for children: • Increase self-esteem • Improve social and problem-solving skills • Avoid problem behaviors
Group Treatment in the Continuum of Care • Detoxification and Inpatient Treatment • Detoxification • First stage in addiction treatment • Represents beginning of treatment/No an end in itself • Residential Treatment • Primary modality for treating alcoholism, drug addiction, and other addictive disorders
Group Treatment in the Continuum of Care • Partial Hospitalization and Day Treatment • Day treatment represents a modality especially indicated fro dual-diagnosis patients • Aftercare and Sober Living • Outpatient Groups and Community Care • Provides support to reduce risk of relapse
Pragmatics of Group Treatment • Therapeutic Community • The Group Method of Therapeutic Community is based on: • Shared governance • Accountability to others • Expression of healthy values • Self-Help Groups • Based on the 12 Steps and Traditions of Alcoholics Anonymous • Psychoeducational Groups • Apply principles of teaching to convey important information about addiction and recovery • Cannabis Youth Treatment Series
Pragmatics of Group Treatment • Cognitive and Behavioral Interventions • Combine the didactic method of psychoeducational groups with systematic training in coping, social, and problem-solving skills • Co-occuring disorders: contemporary term for comorbid disorders or dual diagnosis • Forms of Cognitive and Behavioral Interventions • Seeking Safety • Motivational Interviewing
Pragmatics of Group Treatment • Group Psychotherapy • Differs from other forms of group treatment: • Highly skilled leader is required • Group itself is viewed as the means for therapeutic change • Uses cohesiveness to create a safe, holding environment in which members may explore their feelings and their relationships with one another
Pragmatics of Group Treatment • Relational Therapy and Family Groups • Involves individuals and intimate others in a group process to examine bonding and boundaries • Most common form of relational therapy in substance treatment is multifamily groups. • Some groups seem to fit a particular level in the continuum of care: • Psychoeducational groups in the school setting to prevent substance abuse
Group Treatment Efficacy • Group Treatment presents obvious benefits in terms of: • Efficiency, • Relatively low costs in comparison to individual treatment, • Compatibility with the needs and preferences of recovering people.