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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A five page research paper that identifies 6 clinical family addiction assessment phases, 5 major drug detection tests, and provides the meaning for a list of evaluation measures that are part of the MSI-R and SASSI-I instruments. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KL9_khfamaddth.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
is inadequate (Olmeztoprak, 2010). The understanding utilizing the six clinical family addiction assessment interview phases aids practitioners in achieving the goal of accurate assessment. The first of these phases is
the Identification Phase, and this involves identifying which family members should be present during therapy sessions. Inclusion in therapy session is dependent on age and family dynamics (Juhnke and Hagedorn,
2006). Next is the Induction Phase, which serves to decrease the anxiety that the family members are undergoing, as therapists introduce themselves and outline the purpose of the assessment interview.
This typically includes a brief account of the therapists credentials, which establishes the practitioner as someone with the knowledge and skill to required to provide effective treatment (Juhnke and Hagedorn,
2006). During this phase of assessment, the therapist also outlines the implications and limits of confidentiality. The third phase of assessment pertains to Strengths Assessment. The primary objective of
this phase is to have family members relate the various ways in which the addicted family member is meeting current needs in a healthy manner (Juhnke and Hagedorn, 2006). At
this point in the assessment process, the therapist aids the family in identifying way in which they can aid the addicted member in the goal to be substance free. The
intent is not to minimize the problem, but rather to discern ways in which family members can be supportive (Juhnke and Hagedorn, 2006). The intent of the next
phase of assessment is to gather pertinent data that pertains to the addicted family members behaviors. Juhnke and Hagedorn refer to this as the "Drinking and Drugging History Phase" (Juhnke
and Hagedorn, 2006, p. 156). The counselor asks other members of the family to relate their observations of addictive behavior, and this is often powerfully therapeutic, but counselors are cautioned
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