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Journal ArticleDOI

In search of how people change: Applications to addictive behaviors.

TLDR
In this article, the authors summarized research on self-initiated and professionally facilitated change of addictive behaviors using the key transtheoretical constructs of stages and processes of change.
Abstract
How people intentionally change addictive behaviors with and without treatment is not well understood by behavioral scientists. This article summarizes research on self-initiated and professionally facilitated change of addictive behaviors using the key transtheoretical constructs of stages and processes of change. Modification of addictive behaviors involves progression through five stages—precontemplation, contemplation, preparation, action, and maintenance—and individuals typically recycle through these stages several times before termination of the addiction. Multiple studies provide strong support for these stages as well as for a finite and common set of change processes used to progress through the stages. Research to date supports a transtheoretical model of change that systematically integrates the stages with processes of change from diverse theories of psychotherapy.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cognitive debiasing 2: impediments to and strategies for change

TL;DR: This paper outlines a general schema of how cognitive change occurs and the constraints that may apply, and examines the major strategies that have been developed in the social sciences and in medicine to achieve cognitive and affective debiasing, including the important concept of forcing functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

A self-administered questionnaire to measure dependence on cigarettes: the cigarette dependence scale

TL;DR: CDS-12 and CDS-5 are reliable measures of cigarette dependence which fulfill several criteria of content validity and construct validity and are sensitive to change over time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adding voucher-based incentives to coping skills and motivational enhancement improves outcomes during treatment for marijuana dependence.

TL;DR: The positive effects of the voucher-based incentive program in this article support the utility of incentive-based interventions for the treatment of substance dependence disorders including marijuana dependence, and a greater percentage of participants in the MBTV group compared with the MBT or M groups were abstinent at the end of treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI

If at first you don't succeed. False hopes of self-change.

TL;DR: The authors review the reasons why so many people tend to fail in their self-change attempts and then examine how people interpret these failures in such a way that they are led to keep trying repeatedly despite apparently overwhelming odds.
Journal ArticleDOI

Substance Abuse Among Older Adults

TL;DR: Although the myth that older adults do not use mood-altering substances persists, evidence suggests that substance use among older adults has been underidentified for decades and projected rates of substance use to increase over the next twenty years.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Transtheoretical therapy: Toward a more integrative model of change.

TL;DR: Prochaska et al. as mentioned in this paper studied how individuals change on their own compared with change in formalized treatments, and identified five basic processes of change, which can be applied at either the level of the individual's experience or environment.
Book

Handbook of Psychotherapy and Behavior Change

TL;DR: The NIMH Treatment of Depression Collaborative Research Program: Where We Began and Where We Are (I. Elkin, et al. as discussed by the authors ) presents a methodology, design, and evaluation in psychotherapy research.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Process of Smoking Cessation: An Analysis of Precontemplation, Contemplation, and Preparation Stages of Change.

TL;DR: This study tested the transtheoretical model of change that posits a series of stages through which smokers move as they successfully change the smoking habit, and results strongly support the stages of change model.
Book ChapterDOI

Toward a Comprehensive Model of Change

TL;DR: In 1984, a group of researchers, theorists, and therapists gathered at an international conference in Scotland to contribute to the development of a more comprehensive model of change for the treatment of addictive behaviors as mentioned in this paper.
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