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      Changes in Professionals’ Attitudes and Approaches to Parents in the Drug and Alcohol Treatment

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          Abstract

          Background:

          Parental involvement with drug and alcohol services remains limited.

          Aim:

          to illuminate changes in addiction professionals’ subjective attitudes and approaches of parents over time in their career.

          Methods:

          Overall, twenty seven drug and alcohol professionals participated in the study.

          Results:

          Themes depicting changes on therapists’ attitudes, beliefs and experiences of working with the families of their clients are ‘Redefining therapeutic role and expectations’, ‘Increased understanding and acceptance’, ‘Finding the right distance in relationships’, ‘Ability to contain feelings and experiences’, ‘Being selective in collaborations with professionals’, ‘Empathy for coworkers and increased collaboration’. Therapists described their interaction with families of their clients in their earlier years of practice as a challenging and often overwhelming experience generating intense anger and frustration which sometimes led to acting outs and tempted them to give up their efforts to build an alliance with family members. Nevertheless, experience, clinical supervision and personal growth contributed in being gradually more capable in managing their emotional reactions, setting limits, having less and more realistic expectations from family members and finally providing the latter with the necessary experience of being understood.

          Conclusions:

          Overall, addiction therapists feel unprepared for meeting the challenging experience of collaborating with families in their earlier years of practice requiring educational support and clinical supervision. Further research is required on addiction professionals-parents alliance and countertransference issues.

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          Most cited references14

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          What about focus group interaction data?

          The purpose of this article is to discuss issues related to group interaction data in focus groups. How should it be analyzed and reported? The author addresses these questions using qualitative research approaches with examples from her research to foster further discussion regarding focus group research.
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            Harm reduction therapy with families and friends of people with drug problems.

            This article describes and illustrates the ongoing development of a treatment for working with families and friends of drug users using harm reduction principles. The author was instrumental in applying harm reduction principles to substance abuse and has used these same principles to help families deal with the pessimism, pain, and grief that accompany their relationship to a person with an active substance abuse problem. The treatment involves learning decision-making processes based on both self-care and love for the substance abuser and is based on the values of harm reduction, caring, and incrementalism, rather than those of codependency, tough love, and abrupt behavior change. A long-term family therapy group and two family consultations illustrate the treatment and its applications.
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              Barriers and enablers to implementation of family-based work in alcohol services: a qualitative study of alcohol worker perceptions

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Mater Sociomed
                Mater Sociomed
                Materia Socio-Medica
                AVICENA, d.o.o., Sarajevo (Bosnia and Herzegovina )
                1512-7680
                1986-597X
                December 2016
                : 28
                : 6
                : 440-443
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Technological Educational Institute of Athens, Nursing Department–Family Unit, DDU, Psychiatric Hospital of Attica, Athens, Greece
                [2 ]Treatment Alcoholism Unit, Psychiatric Hospital of Attica, Greece
                Author notes
                Corresponding author: Evdokia Missouridou, Lecturer in Mental Health Nursing, Department of Nursing, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, Greece. Phone: +3 697 320 75 94; E-mail: emis@ 123456teiath.gr
                Article
                MSM-28-440
                10.5455/msm.2016.28.440-443
                5239650
                e3cd3703-a79a-4988-8786-6e5cfd4c4eab
                Copyright: © 2016 Evdokia Missouridou, Despina Esseridou

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 23 October 2016
                : 12 December 2016
                Categories
                Original Paper

                addiction,parents,family,professionals’,experiences,carers,focus groups,greece

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