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Psychotherapy for Cocaine Addiction

Cocaine abuse continues to be a major public health problem. Drug abuse researchers and practitioners have developed theoretically diverse cocaine-specific psychological treatments, including behavioral and cognitive-behavioral therapies, psychodynamic therapies, and integrative outpatient programs....

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Published in:Psychology of addictive behaviors 1998-03, Vol.12 (1), p.47-61
Main Authors: Van Horn, Deborah H. A, Frank, Arlene F
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Language:English
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description Cocaine abuse continues to be a major public health problem. Drug abuse researchers and practitioners have developed theoretically diverse cocaine-specific psychological treatments, including behavioral and cognitive-behavioral therapies, psychodynamic therapies, and integrative outpatient programs. In 1991, a major literature review identified several promising approaches, but there was little empirical evidence for their efficacy (R. A. Rawson J. L. Obert, M. J. McCann, F. G. Castro, & W. Ling, 1991 ). Since then, outpatient psychotherapies for cocaine addiction have increasingly been empirically evaluated. This article summarizes prominent current approaches, with emphasis on empirical studies that have appeared since the Rawson et al. (1991) review, and evaluates progress in the field. Studies of treatment retention and the effect of comorbid psychopathology on treatment response are reviewed, and directions for future research are proposed.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); PsycARTICLES
subjects Addicts
Cocaine
Comorbidity
Drug Addiction
Female
Human
Literature reviews
Male
Outcomes
Outpatient Treatment
Psychopathology
Psychotherapy
Treatment Compliance
USA
title Psychotherapy for Cocaine Addiction
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