Canadian Psychiatric Association

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Editorial
The Role of Pharmaceutical Companies in Research and Development — Plaudits and Cautions
Quentin Rae-Grant
(PDF)

Guest Editorial
Diagnostic Concepts and the Prevention of Schizophrenia
Ming T Tsuang, Stephen V Faraone
(PDF)

In Review
Understanding Predisposition to Schizophrenia: Toward Intervention and Prevention
Ming T Tsuang, William S Stone, Stephen V Faraone
(PDF)

Preventing Schizophrenia and Psychotic Behaviour: Definitions and Methodological Issues
Stephen V Faraone, Hendricks Brown, Stephen J Glatt, Ming T Tsuang

(PDF)

Original Research
Association of QEEG Findings With Clinical Characteristics of OCD: Evidence of Left Frontotemporal Dysfunction

Ôenel Tot, Aynur Özge, Ülkü Çömelekolu, Kemal Yazici, Nilgün Bal

(PDF)

Ecstasy and Drug Consumption Patterns: A Canadian Rave Population Study
Samantha R Gross, Sean P Barrett, John S Shestowsky, Robert O Pihl

(PDF)

Research Methods in Psychiatry
The 2 “Es” of Research: Efficacy and Effectiveness Trials

David L Streiner,

(PDF)

Brief Communication
Serum Cholesterol Level Comparison: Control Subjects, Anxiety Disorder Patients, and Obsessive–Compulsive Disorder Patients

Helmut Peter, Iver Hand, Fritz Hohagen, Anne Koenig, Olaf Mindermann, Frank Oeder, Markus Wittich

(PDF)

Perceptions of Intimidation in the Psychiatric Educational Environment in Edmonton, Alberta
Phil Tibbo, CJ de Gara, Treena M Blake, Carolyn Steinberg, Brian Stonehocker

(PDF)

Senior Residents in Psychiatry: Views on Training in Developmental Disabilities
Philip Burge, Hélène Ouellette-Kuntz, Bruce McCreary, Elspeth Bradley, Pierre Leichner

(PDF)

Evidence That Latitude is Directly Related to Variation in Suicide Rates
George E Davis, Walter E Lowell

(PDF)

CPA Position Paper
The 1996 CMA Code of Ethics Annotated for Psychiatrists

 


Book Reviews
(PDF)
Substance Abuse Treatment and the Stages of Change: Selecting and Planning Interventions.

Handbook of Personality Disorders: Theory, Research and Treatment

A Clinical Guide to Sleep Disorders in Children and Adolescents

Love Relations: Normality and Pathology

The Mental Health Matrix: A Manual to Improve Services


Letters to the Editor
(PDF)
Massive Weight Gain and Hostility Force Mirtazapine Stoppage

Functional Dyspepsia and Mirtazapine

Re: Using Language in Psychiatry

Dr Fine Replies

Psychotic Mania in Bipolar II Depression Related to Sertraline Discontinuation

Délirium associé à l’azithromycine

Behavioural Therapy for the Treatment of Alcohol Abuse and Dependence

Book Review

Substance Abuse

Substance Abuse Treatment and the Stages of Change: Selecting and Planning Interventions. Gerard J Connors, Dennis M Donovan, Carlo C DiClemente. New York: Guilford Press; 2001. 274 p. US$35.00.


Reviewer rating*: Excellent

Review by Maurice Dongier, MD, FRCPC
Montreal, Quebec

Interventions for substance abusers have to be tailored to clients with varying levels of readiness to change. The Prochaska and DiClemente construct, developed over the past 20 years, posits 5 stages: precontemplation, contemplation, preparation, action, and maintenance (1). It covers a cycle of attitudes from denial to secure, solidly established commitment to change. The stages-of-change model is particularly influential in the field of addictions. More often than not, individuals regress to earlier stages of change before permanently reaching the maintenance stage—as is illustrated by Mark Twain’s observation: “Quitting smoking is easy, I have done it many times.”

This book provides lively case examples to illustrate the stages, together with useful tables of common characteristics. For instance, the action stage is “the stage in which individuals modify their behavior, experiences or environment in order to overcome their problems . . . with firm and clear commitment to change” (p 25).

The maintenance stage (that is, the stage of avoiding relapse) “is not static but instead an active and vital endeavour” (p 29). Most relapses occur during the 6-month period following the action stage. Managing relapses is, of course, part of the maintenance stage.

A chapter is dedicated to the detailed measurement of alcohol and other drug use. This is a major ingredient of success, valid both for research and clinical use, because reliable assessment is an essential part of intervention. Indeed, assessment itself has been shown to be a highly effective “minimal intervention” technique.

The stage of change can be measured with different instruments, such as the University of Rhode Island Change Assessment (URICA), the Stages of Change Readiness and Treatment Eagerness Scale (SOCRATES), and the Readiness to Change Questionnaire (RCQ). A staging algorithm provides strong evidence that the stage of change can predict treatment outcomes.

All the available assessment instruments are well described, and the need to individualize treatment goals is emphasized. Table 4.2 (p 88) is a checklist of the qualities of well-formed treatment goals. It will be valuable to any therapist engaged in the (usually long-term) treatment of individuals with addictions. For therapists, reassessing treatment objectives and current status (occasionally with the client) is a worthwhile and unfortunately often-neglected exercise. The authors’ proposed treatment goals deserve a full quotation. Treatment should be as follows:

1. salient and meaningful to the client

2. incremental and thus more manageable

3. concrete, specific and behavior focused

4. focused on increasing desired behaviors

5. include progressive steps for achieving goals

6. realistic and achievable

7. perceived as requiring work and effort

8. appropriate for the projected treatment period.

This book is by 3 of the best American experts in the field. It may be seen as a useful complement to Miller and Rollnick’s 1991 volume on motivational interviewing (MI), a classic in the field of addiction treatment (2). In this book, the authors had identified the factors underlying the development of motivation, which they summarized in the acronym “FRAMES” (“feedback” of information from assessment, emphasis on personal “responsibility” for change, “advice” to change, providing a “menu” of strategies for change, therapist “empathy,” and facilitation of clients “self-efficacy”). These ingredients are in fact common to many psychotherapies and counselling techniques, and there is a growing consensus that similar mechanisms of change may underlie all treatments, despite superficial differences.

Subsequent research has shown that MI may be either used in isolation or as a preparation for treatment (for example, residential treatment) and that it may double the alcohol-abstinence rate.

Training practitioners to change their behaviour from the traditional confrontational style to the techniques clearly articulated here deserves considerable attention. As an example, relying on therapist authority is inconsistent with the theory of these books. Close supervision of counsellors often shows that the points at which they most need help are those they do not perceive and, thus, cannot describe in their self-report.

This book is very much worth its price. It will be an excellent resource for all professionals and counsellors involved in addiction treatment.

References

1. Prochaska JO, DiClemente CC. The transtheoretical approach: Crossing the traditional boundaries of therapy. In: Malabar FL: Krieger; 1984.

2. Miller WR, Rollnick S. Motivational interviewing:Preparing people to change addictive behaviour. New York: Guildford Press; 1991.


*Reviewer Rating Scale/ Échelle d’évaluation du réviseur

Excellent / Excellent
Very Good / Très bon
Good / Bon
Fair / Passable
Not recommended / Pas recommandé

 


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