NIDA Home > Publications > Research Monographs > | |
Beyond the Therapeutic Alliance: Keeping the Drug-Dependent Individual in Treatment |
|
NIDA Research Monograph, Number 165 [Printed in 1997]If you have the Acrobat reader plug-in for Netscape or Internet Explorer click on the document link and you will be able to view and/or print out the pages. If you have trouble viewing the document in your browser window, download the document (Windows users - right click on the link and Save as...) to your computer and get Adobe Acrobat Reader (free) in order to view it. To download all of the PDF documents in an archive format, choose the type you wish to download, decompress the file with the decompression software on your computer, then view using Adobe Acrobat Reader.
Macintosh - Monograph165.hqx (716K)
Click on link to go page Treatment for Drug Addiction: It Won't Work
If They Don't Receive It-----1 Enhancing Retention in Clinical Trials
of Psychosocial Treatments: Practical Strategies-----4 From the Initial Clinic Contact to Aftercare:
A Brief Review of Effective Strategies for Retaining Cocaine Abusers in
Treatment-----25 Help-Seeking by Substance Abusers: The
Role of Harm Reduction and Behavioral-Economic Approaches To Facilitate
Treatment Entry and Retention-----44 Tailoring Interventions to Clients: Effects
on Engagement and Retention-----85 Factors Associated With Treatment Continuation:
Implications for the Treatment of Drug Dependence-----110 Stages of Change: Interactions With
Treatment Compliance and Involvement-----131 The Role of Family and Significant Others
in the Engagement and Retention of Drug-Dependent Individuals-----157 Establishing and Maintaining a Therapeutic
Alliance With Substance Abuse Patients: A Cognitive Therapy Approach-----181 Back to Basics: Fundamental Cognitive Therapy
Skills for Keeping Drug-Dependent Individuals in Treatment-----207 Establishing a Therapeutic Alliance With
Substance Abusers-----233 |
|
Advanced Search | FAQs | Accessibility | Site Map | Help | NIDA Home | Privacy Policy | FOIA (NIH) | Employment | Print Version | ||
The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) is part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Questions? See our Contact Information. Last updated on Wednesday, September 18, 2002. |