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Hogan, Sean R.; Bailey, Caroline E. – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2010
The purpose of the study was to explore the potential effectiveness of service learning as a pedagogical technique for providing substance abuse education to human services/social work students. Using a quasi-experimental design, the authors assigned 38 human services undergraduate students to experimental and comparison groups on the basis of…
Descriptors: Human Services, Undergraduate Students, Quasiexperimental Design, Substance Abuse
Vogel, Carl – District Administration, 2009
This article discusses recovery high schools which are designed specifically to serve students who have been through a professional substance abuse treatment program and are working to stay away from drugs and alcohol. The schools typically serve multiple districts and are funded from both the per-pupil state funds that follow a student and what…
Descriptors: High Schools, Substance Abuse, Drug Abuse, Alcohol Abuse
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Peters, Jamie; Kalivas, Peter W.; Quirk, Gregory J. – Learning & Memory, 2009
Extinction is a form of inhibitory learning that suppresses a previously conditioned response. Both fear and drug seeking are conditioned responses that can lead to maladaptive behavior when expressed inappropriately, manifesting as anxiety disorders and addiction, respectively. Recent evidence indicates that the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) is…
Descriptors: Neurological Organization, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Fear, Anxiety
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Simpson, D. Dwayne; Joe, George W.; Knight, Kevin; Rowan-Szal, Grace A.; Gray, Julie S. – Journal of Offender Rehabilitation, 2012
The TCU Short Forms contain a revised and expanded set of assessments for planning and managing addiction treatment services. They are formatted as brief (one-page) forms to measure client needs and functioning, including drug use severity and history (TCUDS II), criminal thinking and cognitive orientation (CTSForm), motivation and readiness for…
Descriptors: Substance Abuse, Correctional Institutions, Drug Use, Integrity
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Warren, Jane; Stech, Matt; Douglas, Kristin; Lambert, Serena – Journal of Creativity in Mental Health, 2010
Self-reflection, creativity, and experiential education are effective teaching strategies for counselor educators. Understanding and conceptualizing client cases can feel overwhelming for counselors-in-training. This article describes how the process of case conceptualization can be enhanced through the use of film. A case example is provided of…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Substance Abuse, Counselor Training, Experiential Learning
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Roy, Alec – Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 2010
In order to examine risk factors for attempting suicide in heroin dependent patients, a group of 527 abstinent opiate dependent patients had a psychiatric interview and completed the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire. Patients who had or had never attempted suicide were compared on putative suicide risk factors. It was found that 207 of the 527…
Descriptors: Cocaine, Suicide, At Risk Persons, Questionnaires
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Grant, Judith – Journal of Offender Rehabilitation, 2009
The climate of domestic drug policy in the United States as it pertains to both women and men at the beginning of the 21st century is the criminalization mode of regulation--a mode that is based on the model of addiction as a crime and one that is used to prohibit the use of illegal drugs. In Canada, drug policy is based mainly on the harm…
Descriptors: Crime, Incidence, Drug Abuse, Drug Use
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Snow, M. Elizabeth; Salmon, Amy; Young, Richard – Collected Essays on Learning and Teaching, 2010
Health care researchers and practitioners are increasingly asked to work across disciplines (or, in keeping with the conference theme, "Between the Tides") to deal with complex health issues. But working with individuals from different fields is more challenging than it sounds. Working across disciplines can result in tension and…
Descriptors: Substance Abuse, Drug Addiction, Interdisciplinary Approach, Teamwork
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Natera Rey, Guillermina; Mora-Rios, Jazmin; Tiburcio Sainz, Marcela; Medina Aguilar, Perla – Drugs: Education, Prevention & Policy, 2010
In this article, the authors comment on the contribution of the Alcohol, Drugs and the Family research group to draw public and scientific attention to the suffering and needs of families coping with addiction problems. The article also describes the impact of the stress-strain-coping-support model and the 5-Step Method on the research,…
Descriptors: Family Needs, Intervention, Foreign Countries, Public Policy
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Goldberg, Lynette R.; Heiss, Cynthia J.; White, Letitia; Kaf, Wafaa A.; Becker, Alan; Schindler, Jessica B.; Dion, Nancy; Oswalt, Jill – Communication Disorders Quarterly, 2010
Methamphetamine (meth) exposure during fetal development has the potential to adversely affect the development of multiple organ systems. An interdisciplinary case study of a 4-year 11-month-old child born to a mother addicted to meth revealed significant cognitive and communicative delays. Possible meth-related consequences for these delays…
Descriptors: Diseases, Hyperactivity, Children, Case Studies
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DeMaria, Peter A., Jr.; Patkar, Ashwin A. – Journal of American College Health, 2008
Opiate abuse and dependence have become important concerns for college healthcare providers. The passage of the Drug Addiction Treatment Act of 2000 and the approval of the combination buprenorphine/naloxone for office-based treatment of opiate dependence have increased the options available for college students and their healthcare providers. The…
Descriptors: Drug Addiction, Pharmacology, Drug Abuse, College Students
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Agrawal, Shantanu; Everett, Worth W.; Sharma, Sonali – Drugs: Education, Prevention & Policy, 2010
Purpose: This study examined the impact of medical education on students' views of substance abuse treatment, public policy options and training. Method: A longitudinal survey was conducted on a single-class cohort of 101 students in a major American, urban medical school. The survey was administered in the Spring semesters of the first to third…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Medical Students, Substance Abuse, Drug Addiction
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Hirsch, Jameson K.; Britton, Peter C.; Conner, Kenneth R. – International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction, 2010
We examined internal consistency and test-retest reliability of a measure of dispositional optimism, the Life Orientation Test-Revised, in 121 opiate-dependent patients seeking methadone treatment. Internal consistency was adequate at baseline (alpha = 0.69) and follow-up (alpha = 0.72). Low socioeconomic status and being on disability were…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Status, Predictive Validity, Measures (Individuals), Reliability
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Dhand, Amar – Ethnography and Education, 2009
Street "doctory" is a form of peer-based medical care performed in street settings among a group of heroin addicts in Yamuna Bazaar, New Delhi. Using participant observation and semi-structured interviews, this study describes three components of the practice, and suggests that each contained peer learning processes. First, participants…
Descriptors: Medical Services, Peer Groups, Health Education, Participant Observation
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Moiseeva, Viktoriia Vladimirovna; Pozniakova, Margarita Efimovna – Russian Education and Society, 2009
The activities of religious organizations have been the cause of numerous disputes first and foremost because it was only relatively recently that these organizations came to be involved as active agents in antinarcotics policy, and there is little if any unanimity of opinion as regards how "useful" or "harmful" they are in…
Descriptors: Narcotics, Drug Abuse, Religious Organizations, Mass Media Effects
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