2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.chc.2016.06.001
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Family-Based Treatments for Adolescent Substance Use

Abstract: Adolescent substance use is a major risk factor for negative outcomes, including substance dependence later in life, criminal behavior, school problems, mental health disorders, injury, and death. This article provides a user-friendly, clinically focused, and pragmatic review of current and evidence-based family treatments, including multisystemic therapy, multidimensional family therapy, functional family therapy, brief strategic family therapy, ecologically based family therapy, family behavior therapy, cult… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…On a related note, although we have directed much of our attention (and many of our recommendations) toward the role of exercise for youth within residential treatment programs, there are other well-established intervention modalities that would also benefit from investigations into the feasibility and efficacy of exercise programs. Family-based therapy, for example, is a recognized treatment approach for adolescent substance use (e.g., Liddle et al, 2005 ; Horigian et al, 2016 ), and the implementation of (and assessment of recovery outcomes derived from) family-based exercise interventions within these settings would be extremely valuable.…”
Section: Recommendations For Future Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On a related note, although we have directed much of our attention (and many of our recommendations) toward the role of exercise for youth within residential treatment programs, there are other well-established intervention modalities that would also benefit from investigations into the feasibility and efficacy of exercise programs. Family-based therapy, for example, is a recognized treatment approach for adolescent substance use (e.g., Liddle et al, 2005 ; Horigian et al, 2016 ), and the implementation of (and assessment of recovery outcomes derived from) family-based exercise interventions within these settings would be extremely valuable.…”
Section: Recommendations For Future Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, negative experiences such as bullying, social conflict, and economic stress are found to be common triggers of drug relapse. On the other hand, positive social experiences, such as having friends and social support, can be restorative factors over relapse [22][23][24][25]. Therefore, it is not surprising that therapies that improve the adolescents' most important social environments -their families -are found to be helpful in the treatment of SUDs.…”
Section: New Ideas In Sud Prevention and Treatmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, a number of questionnaire studies have confirmed the predictive effect of family support on drug rehabilitation motivation [ 60 ], relapse tendency [ 61 ] and maintenance effect [ 62 ]. In the aspect of “family relationship”, the interaction between substance users and family members [ 63 ] and their ability to express themselves emotionally [ 64 ] could affect the relapse tendency or the success rate of drug rehabilitation. Other studies have shown that family participation and the repair of their relationship with their families are the most important predictors of drug abusers’ participation in treatment [ 65 ], and could encourage substance users to admit that they are willing to change [ 66 ] and maintain positive changes [ 67 ] and stability in terms of detoxification [ 68 ].…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%