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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4-page paper discusses the importance of vocational treaining in subtance abuse treatment programs. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTvocsub.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
some time spent in a sanitarium to either "dry out" or get off the drugs. The problem was, once the person in question was dismissed from the institution, nine times
out of ten, he or she would just end up back in the same straits as before. The main problem is that while the patient was detoxed, the old habits
remained. And if that person was poverty-stricken, with no education, no amount of detoxification or "drying out" would help. This is why,
during the past few years, advocates for substance abusers have been pushing so hard for the idea that substance abuse treatment be given in tandem with vocational or job training.
For example, SAMHSAs Consensus Panel issued recently recommendations (based on research and clinical experience) as to the need for vocational services as an "integral component of all substance abuse treatment
programs" (2004). The main reasons are that integrating these two factors means that the treatment goes just beyond getting a person off drugs or alcohol, and goes into changing that
persons very lifestyle, especially of training focuses the patients on routes into careers, as well as overcoming barriers to employment (SAMHSA, 2004). Additionally, vocational training helps maintain skills so that
person can keep his or her employment (SAMHSA, 2004). The good news is that there are several programs that integrate substance abuse
treatment and employment training. One such program was set up by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA), located at Columbia University (Woolis et al, 2001). During 1997,
in the wake of welfare reform and President Bill Clintons "welfare-to-work" idea, CASA requested and received funding from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to launch CASAWORKS for Families, with the
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