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Förändringsprocesser i samband med missbruksbehandling - vilka faktorer beskriver klienter som viktiga för att initiera och bibehålla positiva förändringar?

Ninive von Greiff, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2012 - 
- Vol. 29, Iss: 2, pp 195-209
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TLDR
AIMS as mentioned in this paper describes and analyzes the process of change during and after drug treatment, what factors are described by clients asimportant to initiate and maintain positive changes, and the aim is to describe and analyze ho...
Abstract
Processes of change during and after drug treatment, What factors are described by clients asimportant to initiate and maintain positive changes?AIMS – The aim is to describe and analyze ho ...

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Recovery capital in the process of change—differences and similarities between groups of clients treated for alcohol or drug problems

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated clients' retrospective descriptions of the impact of treatment interventions as well as other contextual factors in the clients' process of recovery, and the data set was divided into three categories:
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Positive processes of change among male and female clients treated for alcohol and/or drug problems:

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared descriptions of important factors for initiating and maintaining positive changes among male and female clients treated for alcohol and/or drug problems, and found that women more often than men stress poor mental health and their children as important for initiating change.
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The mechanisms of treatment – client and treatment staff perspectives on change during treatment for alcohol problems

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors study how clients and treatment unit staff perceive the relevance and value of the alcohol treatment intervention for a positive process of change and find that the three treatment components most emphasised by clients are structure and regularity, friendship and support of the group and the personal conduct and professionalism of the staff.
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Repeated Addiction Treatment use in Sweden: A National Register Database Study

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identified predisposing, enabling and need factors associated with addiction treatment in Sweden and examined utilization of treatment in this country, and found that Sweden has a free, universal addiction treatment system.
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Initiating and maintaining a recovery process – experiences of persons with dual diagnosis

TL;DR: Investigation of the internal and social factors that persons with experience from severe mental illness and alcohol and other drugs problems, and who have received treatment for these problems, report on how their lives have changed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Natural Recovery from Addiction: Some Social-Psychological Processes of Untreated Recovery:

Dan Waldorf
TL;DR: In this paper, an exploratory in-depth study of the social-psychological processes of untreated recovery was conducted with a sample of 201 ex-addicts (half of whom were diagnosed with depression).
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Vietnam veterans' rapid recovery from heroin addiction: a fluke or normal expectation?

TL;DR: The surprisingly low levels of readdiction and the rarity of addiction to narcotics alone as compared with poly-substance dependence are findings still not entirely incorporated into public and scientific views of heroin addiction.
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Narratives of recovery from addictive behaviours.

TL;DR: People who try to quit addictive behaviours could be encouraged to make full use of the cultural stock of stories in creating an account that fits their own experience of defeating their particular addiction.
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Social relationships as a decisive factor in recovering from severe mental illness

TL;DR: The results show that recovery processes are social processes in which social relationships play a key role and social relationships emerged as the core category throughout these dimensions.
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Spontaneous Remission from the Problematic Use of Substances: An Inductive Model Derived from a Comparative Analysis of the Alcohol, Opiate, Tobacco, and Food/Obesity Literatures

TL;DR: Common processes important to spontaneous remission from these four substances are identified and form the basis of an inductively derived model of spontaneous remission behavior, relevant to interactionist theory and offered for further, empirical testing.
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