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Bret E. Fuller

Researcher at Portland VA Medical Center

Publications -  30
Citations -  1231

Bret E. Fuller is an academic researcher from Portland VA Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Substance abuse & Hepatitis C. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 30 publications receiving 1137 citations. Previous affiliations of Bret E. Fuller include Veterans Health Administration & Oregon Health & Science University.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Organizational Readiness for Change and opinions toward treatment innovations.

TL;DR: Support for confrontation and noncompliance discharge was strong when staff saw less opportunity for professional growth, weaker peer influence, less Internet access, and perceived less organizational stress, which provides evidence of the ORC's utility in assessing agency strengths and needs during the implementation of evidence-based practices.
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Attitudes toward the integration of smoking cessation treatment into drug abuse clinics.

TL;DR: Use of smoking cessation interventions was associated with the number of additional services offered at clinics, residential detoxification services, and attitudes of the staff toward smoking cessation treatment, as well as staff attitudes toward the integration ofsmoking cessation services as a component of care.
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Correlates of expressed and received violence across relationship types among men and women substance abusers

TL;DR: This paper examined expressed and received violence among men and women in substance abuse treatment and found that the most consistent correlates of violence across relationship types were age, minority status, drug-related consequences, psychiatric distress, and frequency of childhood aggression.
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Client and counselor attitudes toward the use of medications for treatment of opioid dependence

TL;DR: Social normative influences were dominant across settings and medications in determining counselor and client intentions to use medications, suggesting that perceptions about beliefs of peers may play a critical role in use of medications to treat opiate dependence.