YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Treatment Delivery Systems and Addiction Treatment History
Essays 31 - 60
In twelve pages this paper examines how developmental psychology has proven effective in drug addiction treatment therapy. Ten so...
This paper consists of nine pages and explores the types of available treatments and programs for addiction and advocates eclectic...
In five pages this paper considers the effects of addiction and treatment on an individual and also describes twelve step programs...
gotten (or are about to get) "in over-their-heads." Drugs of all kinds do make most people feel "good"; and that is why such ...
In eight pages adolescents addicted to alcohol and drugs are examined from a counseling perspective in which addiction is defined ...
In an overview consisting of five pages cocaine is examined in terms of its physical, social, and psychological effects along with...
In two and a half pages this paper discusses dementia patients in terms of sexual addiction in a consideration of etiology and tre...
lines of demarcation shaped by race, socioeconomic status, gender, or age. It was at it height in the late 1970s. In fact, 1979...
wide range of areas important in achieving and maintaining recovery from drug or alcohol addiction: * Enhanced self esteem * Inter...
In seven pages this report examines group therapy as addiction treatment in a consideration of how cognitive therapy can assist in...
the problem. B. Reluctance to seek treatment. C. Less belief in positive outcome of treatment. D. Direct confrontation can be coun...
In five pages California's state addiction treatment program is examined with the overall plan included but concentrates on the tw...
crime to pay for their habits, they fail academically, and they fail in society as a whole. Drug abusers can become violent or en...
but they are human problems. People who get into trouble with these substances need help, not censure. This paper describes some o...
is that this is a "maladaptive pattern of use and impaired control over a behavior with associated adverse consequences" (Garcia a...
level of problems for inpatients was 20.9% compared to only 8.4% for outpatients (Wilson et al, 2002). When asked to rate the serv...
have access to a range of drugs. Bennett (et al, 2000) argues that the overall rate of substance abuse in the nursing popualtion r...
In a paper consisting of five page the U.S. process of birth delivery is examined in a comparison between traditional hospital del...
In this paper, the writer reflects on the ethical issues associated with treating substance abusers and addiction. The paper cites...
widely used substance. Statistics from 1997 show that about 1.5 million ("New treatments," 2001, p.6) Americans had recently used...
In five pages this paper examines Hegel's philosophy within the context of the statement 'The sole thought which philosophy brings...
of angina, but no indication of muscle damage or clotting (as would be the case in coronary thrombosis). It should also be...
point that relatively few paid attention to it at all. In many respects, the same has occurred in the discussion of anythin...
took her two children, a toddler and an infant, out in 20 degree cold to get Snickers bars (Eller, 2006). Littleton claims she was...
It has never been out of print since its publication and has been translated into "French, German and Dutch" (Taillon 16). Written...
Programs and Addiction Treatment Centers, 2007). Breaking addiction to these and other abused drugs often requires medical interv...
this development, the Gun-Free Schools Act of 1994 was passed, which encouraged a policy of "zero tolerance" as it criminalized s...
for the Native Americans and they did this without a thought to their natural human rights. American historical facts supports thi...
that is, minutes, even hours later, simply walking into a room that was shared with someone who has pulmonary TB exposes that pers...
event, which is capable of causing PTSD symptoms. Complex trauma, however, is when the individual experiences prolonged, repeated ...