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Counselor Bloggers
What is Recovery?

An essay on the subject of “What is Recovery” raises, for me, the question of what is Addiction. Since everyone of us has an idea, our own idea, of what Addiction is, we'll also have our own answer to “What is Recovery?”

Since we don’t have agreement in our field on what Addiction is, I doubt that we can come up with an easy agreement on what recovery is. I could just tell you my definition of both but my goal is not for us to have a debate over which we can come to a resolution. My goal is that we all look at ourselves and how we got to this question. It may be, that after examining ourselves, we may choose to change the question we ask.

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Treatment Variables Than Can Add or Detract from Outcome
Columns - Research to Practice
Written by Michael Taleff, PhD, CSAS, MAC   
Friday, 05 October 2007
Research from two articles that address the matching hypothesis (i.e., therapists should match their interventions and strategies to a particular client) provide information that could help clinicians obtain better treatment outcomes.
Matching may matter

Since Project MATCH (Project MATCH Research Group, 1997), a lot of folks thought the whole matching idea was dead, especially since Project MATCH did not lend any support to matching clients to particular treatments.

Reexamining the matching hypothesis, a survey conducted by Karno and Longabaugh (2007) retrospectively examined 137 clients. Instead of examining specific treatment effectiveness across a wide variety of clients, as Project MATCH did, they concentrated on the role of specific therapist behaviors that were matched, unmatched or mismatched to four types of client variables. The different variables consisted of:



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3.25 Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved."

 
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