198 results
Search Results
2. Insular and cingulate attenuation during decision making is associated with future transition to stimulant use disorder.
- Author
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Stewart, Jennifer L., Butt, Mamona, May, April C., Tapert, Susan F., and Paulus, Martin P.
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INSULAR cortex ,DECISION making ,STIMULANTS ,CINGULATE cortex ,AMPHETAMINE abuse ,ROCK-paper-scissors (Game) ,COCAINE abuse ,DRUG abuse risk factors ,PSYCHOLOGY of drug abusers ,PATIENTS ,BRAIN ,RADIOGRAPHY ,SUBSTANCE abuse risk factors ,COGNITION ,INTERVIEWING ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,PROBABILITY theory ,STATISTICAL hypothesis testing ,TASK performance ,CENTRAL nervous system stimulants - Abstract
Aims To understand processes placing individuals at risk for stimulant (amphetamine and cocaine) use disorder. Design Longitudinal study. Setting University of California, San Diego Department of Psychiatry, CA, USA. Participants Occasional stimulant users (OSU; n = 184) underwent a baseline clinical interview and a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) session. On the basis of a follow-up clinical interview completed 3 years later, OSU ( n = 147) were then categorized as problem stimulant users (PSU: n = 36; those who developed stimulant use disorders in the interim) or desisted stimulant users (DSU: n = 74; those who stopped using). OSU who did not meet criteria for PSU or DSU ( n = 37) were included in dimensional analyses. Measurements fMRI blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) contrast percentage signal change from baseline collected during a Paper-Scissors-Rock task was examined during three decision-making conditions, those resulting in: (1) wins, (2) ties and (3) losses. These data were used as dependent variables in categorical analyses comparing PSU and DSU, as well as dimensional analyses including interim drug use as predictors, controlling for baseline drug use. Findings PSU exhibited lower anterior cingulate, middle insula, superior temporal, inferior parietal, precuneus and cerebellum activation than DSU across all three conditions (significant brain clusters required > 19 neighboring voxels to exceed F
(1,108) = 5.58, P < 0.01 two-tailed; all Cohen's d > 0.83). Higher interim marijuana use was linked to lower pre-central and superior temporal activation during choices resulting in wins (> 19 neighboring voxels to exceed t = 2.61, P < 0.01 two-tailed; R2 change > 0.11). Conclusions Individuals who transition from stimulant use to stimulant use disorder appear to show alterations in neural processing of stimulus valuation and outcome monitoring, patterns also evident in chronic stimulant use disorder. Attenuated anterior cingulate and insular processing may constitute a high-risk neural processing profile, which could be used to calculate risk scores for individuals experimenting with stimulants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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3. An international systematic review of smoking prevalence in addiction treatment.
- Author
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Guydish, Joseph, Passalacqua, Emma, Pagano, Anna, Martínez, Cristina, Le, Thao, Chun, JongSerl, Tajima, Barbara, Docto, Lindsay, Garina, Daria, and Delucchi, Kevin
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,SMOKING statistics ,TOBACCO use ,PEOPLE with drug addiction ,HISTORY - Abstract
Aims Smoking prevalence is higher among people enrolled in addiction treatment compared with the general population, and very high rates of smoking are associated with opiate drug use and receipt of opiate replacement therapy (ORT). We assessed whether these findings are observed internationally. Methods PubMed, PsycINFO and the Alcohol and Alcohol Problems Science Database were searched for papers reporting smoking prevalence among addiction treatment samples, published in English, from 1987 to 2013. Search terms included tobacco use, cessation and substance use disorders using and/or Boolean connectors. For 4549 papers identified, abstracts were reviewed by multiple raters; 239 abstracts met inclusion criteria and these full papers were reviewed for exclusion. Fifty-four studies, collectively comprising 37 364 participants, were included. For each paper we extracted country, author, year, sample size and gender, treatment modality, primary drug treated and smoking prevalence. Results The random-effect pooled estimate of smoking across people in addiction treatment was 84% [confidence interval (CI) = 79, 88%], while the pooled estimate of smoking prevalence across matched population samples was 31% (CI = 29, 33%). The difference in the pooled estimates was 52% (CI = 48%, 57%, P < .0001). Smoking rates were higher in programs treating opiate use compared with alcohol use [odds ratio (OR) = 2.52, CI = 2.00, 3.17], and higher in ORT compared to out-patient programs (OR = 1.42, CI = 1.19, 1.68). Conclusions Smoking rates among people in addiction treatment are more than double those of people with similar demographic characteristics. Smoking rates are also higher in people being treated for opiate dependence compared with people being treated for alcohol use disorder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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4. Addiction and spirituality.
- Author
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Cook, Christopher C. H.
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SPIRITUALITY ,ADDICTIONS ,BOOKS ,PSYCHOLOGY ,MEDICINE - Abstract
Spirituality is a topic of increasing interest to clinicians and researchers interested in addiction. To clarify the way(s) in which the concept of spirituality is understood and employed in practice by clinicians and researchers who publish papers on addiction and spirituality, and to develop a definition or description of spirituality which might receive widespread assent within the field. A descriptive study of 265 published books and papers on spirituality and addiction. The study revealed a diversity and lack of clarity of understanding of the concept of spirituality. However, it was possible to identify 13 conceptual components of spirituality which recurred within the literature. Among these conceptual components of spirituality, ‘relatedness’ and ‘transcendence’ were encountered most frequently. ‘Meaning/purpose’, ‘wholeness (non-)religiousness’ and ‘consciousness’ were encountered less frequently in the papers on addiction and spirituality than in an unsystematically ascertained sample of papers concerned with spirituality in relation to other areas of psychology and medicine. However, biases in the literature are notable. For example, the great majority of publications are from North America and the field is dominated by interest in Twelve-Step and Christian spirituality. Spirituality, as understood within the addiction field, is currently poorly defined. Thirteen conceptual components of spirituality which are employed in this field are identified provisionally and a working definition is proposed as a basis for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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5. What do citation counts count for in the field of addiction? An empirical evaluation of citation counts and their link with peer ratings of quality.
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West, Robert and McIlwaine, Ann
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CITATION indexes ,PEOPLE with addiction - Abstract
Aims This study investigated the value of citation counts as an index of quality in the field of addiction and examined factors that contribute to papers being cited more or less frequently. Design The number of times papers published by the journal Addiction in 1995–98 that had been cited up to May 2000 were counted using the Science and the Social Science Citation Indexes. Articles in nine of the monthly issues from 1997 were rated by two independent expert raters for quality. Factors related to citation counts were also examined including: country of origin of the paper, substance type, solicited versus unsolicited papers and methodology used. Findings A total of 417 unsolicited research reports were included in the citation analysis, of which 79 were also subjected to quality ratings. The experts showed a moderate level of agreement in their ratings (intraclass correlation = 0.39, p < 0.001). However, there was no correlation between number of citations and expert ratings of article quality (R < 0.1). Papers from developing countries received significantly fewer citations than papers from other countries but substance type (e.g. nicotine, opiate, alcohol) and methodology (e.g. survey, treatment trial) were not related to number of citations. Conclusions This study involved just one journal but raised an important issue: the number of citations received by papers on addiction appears to reflect the geographical region of study rather than what experts would consider as 'quality'. If these findings are found to generalize they call into question the use of citation‐related indices as measures of quality in this field and perhaps in others as well. To our knowledge our methodology has not been used before and could be adapted to study the value of citations more widely. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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6. Could COVID expand the future of addiction research? Long‐term implications in the pandemic era.
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Englund, Amir, Sharman, Stephen, Tas, Basak, and Strang, John
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EXPERIMENTAL design ,DRUG addiction ,SAFETY ,BEHAVIORAL research ,CANNABIS (Genus) ,DRUG overdose ,VIRTUAL reality ,DEBATE ,VIDEOCONFERENCING ,GAMBLING ,DOSE-effect relationship in pharmacology ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,OPIOID abuse ,PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY ,HEROIN ,RESPIRATORY mechanics - Abstract
Background/Aims: The COVID‐19 pandemic has significantly impacted face‐to‐face research. This has propelled ideas and plans for more remote styles of research and provided new perspectives on conducting research. This paper aimed to identify challenges specific to conducting remote forms of experimental addiction research, although some of these challenges apply to all types of addiction research. Argument The impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic has led to important lessons for future addiction research. Although remote research has been conducted for decades, little experimental research has been performed remotely. To do so require a new perspective on what research questions we can ask and could also enable preferential capture of those who may be more reluctant to engage in research based in clinical settings. There may, however, be crucial factors that will compromise this process. We illustrate our argument with three real‐world, ongoing case studies centred on gambling behaviour, opioid overdose, and cannabinoid psychopharmacology. We highlight the obstacles to overcome to enable more remote methods of study. Conclusions: The future of experimental research and, more generally, addiction research, will be shaped by the pandemic and may result in advantages, such as reaching different populations and conducting addiction research in more naturalistic settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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7. Keeping secrets: Leslie E. Keeley, the gold cure and the 19th‐century neuroscience of addiction.
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Hickman, Timothy A.
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THERAPEUTIC use of gold ,TREATMENT of addictions ,HISTORY of neurosciences ,HISTORY ,THERAPEUTICS ,QUACKS & quackery ,MEDICAL practice ,ARCHIVES ,ATTENTION ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,NEUROLOGY ,PATIENT satisfaction ,WITNESSES ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Abstract: Background and Aims: Dr Leslie E. Keeley was perhaps the world's most famous addiction cure doctor at the turn of the 20th century, but mainstream medicine dismissed him as a quack because he dispensed a secret cure. This paper aims to describe Keeley's now largely forgotten story and to draw attention to the role of contextual issues in the acceptance or rejection of any theory of addiction, particularly the neuroscientific theories of the early 21st century. Methods: This study is a qualitative assessment and contextualization of historical documents. Its main sources are archival and are, for the most part, unknown to historians. The paper also offers intellectual and historical context that is drawn from leading historical and sociological analyses. Results: Keeley's addiction cure was dismissed as quackery because it failed to meet the changing standards of late 19th‐century professional medicine. This begs us to consider contextual issues in any assertion of the viability of addiction therapeutics, in the present as well the past. Conclusions: Keeley's near erasure from the historical record was a consequence of a broader, late 19th‐century medical power struggle that took precedence over the testimony of tens of thousands of satisfied patients who claimed that Keeley's cure worked. Context matters in the assessment of the viability of theories of addiction from the past, but also from the present. Historians and social scientists are well placed to make those assessments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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8. Iterative categorisation (IC) (part 2): interpreting qualitative data.
- Author
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Neale, Joanne
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DRUG addiction ,RESEARCH methodology ,QUALITATIVE research ,DATA analysis - Abstract
Iterative categorisation (IC) is a systematic and transparent technique for analysing qualitative textual data, first presented in Addiction in 2016. IC breaks the analytical process down into stages, separating basic 'description' from more advanced 'interpretation'. This paper focuses on the interpretive analytical stage that is shown to comprise three core processes: (i) conceptualising (undertaken inductively, deductively or abductively); (ii) differentiating; and (iii) externalising. Each process is described, followed by published examples to support what has been explained. As qualitative analyses tend to be recursive rather than linear, the three processes often need to be repeated to account for all the data. Following the stages of IC will ensure that qualitative research generates improved understanding of the phenomena being studied, study findings contribute to and enhance the existing literature, the audience for any qualitative output is broad and international, and any practical implications or study recommendations are relevant to other contexts and settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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9. Raising the bar: improving methodological rigour in cognitive alcohol research.
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Pennington, Charlotte R., Jones, Andrew, Bartlett, James E., Copeland, Amber, and Shaw, Daniel J.
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RELIABILITY (Personality trait) ,RESEARCH methodology ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,ALCOHOL drinking ,QUALITY assurance ,COGNITIVE testing ,MEDICAL research ,ATTENTIONAL bias - Abstract
Background and Aims: A range of experimental paradigms claim to measure the cognitive processes underpinning alcohol use, suggesting that heightened attentional bias, greater approach tendencies and reduced cue‐specific inhibitory control are important drivers of consumption. This paper identifies methodological shortcomings within this broad domain of research and exemplifies them in studies focused specifically on alcohol‐related attentional bias. Argument and analysis: We highlight five main methodological issues: (i) the use of inappropriately matched control stimuli; (ii) opacity of stimulus selection and validation procedures; (iii) a credence in noisy measures; (iv) a reliance on unreliable tasks; and (v) variability in design and analysis. This is evidenced through a review of alcohol‐related attentional bias (64 empirical articles, 68 tasks), which reveals the following: only 53% of tasks use appropriately matched control stimuli; as few as 38% report their stimulus selection and 19% their validation procedures; less than 28% used indices capable of disambiguating attentional processes; 22% assess reliability; and under 2% of studies were pre‐registered. Conclusions: Well‐matched and validated experimental stimuli, the development of reliable cognitive tasks and explicit assessment of their psychometric properties, and careful consideration of behavioural indices and their analysis will improve the methodological rigour of cognitive alcohol research. Open science principles can facilitate replication and reproducibility in alcohol research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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10. An international consensus for assessing internet gaming disorder using the new DSM-5 approach.
- Author
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Petry, Nancy M., Rehbein, Florian, Gentile, Douglas A., Lemmens, Jeroen S., Rumpf, Hans-Jürgen, Mößle, Thomas, Bischof, Gallus, Ran Tao, Fung, Daniel S. S., Borges, Guilherme, Auriacombe, Marc, González Ibáñez, Angels, Tam, Philip, and O’Brien, Charles P.
- Subjects
VIDEO games & psychology ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,DECEPTION ,CLASSIFICATION of mental disorders ,MENTAL status examination ,VIDEO games ,INTERNET addiction ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Aims For the first time, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders (DSM-5) introduces nonsubstance addictions as psychiatric diagnoses. The aims of this paper are to (i) present the main controversies surrounding the decision to include internet gaming disorder, but not internet addiction more globally, as a non-substance addiction in the research appendix of the DSM-5, and (ii) discuss the meaning behind the DSM-5 criteria for internet gaming disorder. The paper also proposes a common method for assessing internet gaming disorder. Although the need for common diagnostic criteria is not debated, the existence of multiple instruments reflect the divergence of opinions in the field regarding how best to diagnose this condition. Methods We convened international experts from European, North and South American, Asian and Australasian countries to discuss and achieve consensus about assessing internet gaming disorder as defined within DSM-5. Results We describe the intended meaning behind each of the nine DSM-5 criteria for internet gaming disorder and present a single item that best reflects each criterion, translated into the 10 main languages of countries in which research on this condition has been conducted. Conclusions Using results from this cross-cultural collaboration, we outline important research directions for understanding and assessing internet gaming disorder. As this field moves forward, it is critical that researchers and clinicians around the world begin to apply a common methodology; this report is the first to achieve an international consensus related to the assessment of internet gaming disorder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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11. Addiction Research Centres and the Nurturing of Creativity.
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Parry, Charles, Morojele, Neo, Myers, Bronwyn, and Plüddemann, Andreas
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COMPULSIVE behavior ,RESEARCH ,HIV infections ,HEALTH policy ,RISK-taking behavior ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
ABSTRACT The Alcohol and Drug Abuse Research Unit (ADARU) was established at the South African Medical Research Council (MRC) at the beginning of 2001, although its origins lie in the activities of the Centre for Epidemiological Research in Southern Africa and other MRC entities. Initial challenges included attracting external funding, recruiting new staff, developing the skills of junior staff, publishing in international journals and building national and international collaborative networks. ADARU currently comprises a core staff of 33 members who work on 22 projects spanning substance use epidemiology and associated consequences, intervention studies with at-risk populations and services research. A large component of this portfolio focuses on the link between alcohol and other drug use and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) risk behaviour, with funding from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Junior staff members are encouraged to develop independent research interests and pursue PhD studies. Research outputs, such as the 20 papers that were published in 2010 and the 35 conference presentations from that year, form an important part of the unit's research translation activities. We engage actively with policy processes at the local, provincial, national and international levels, and have given particular attention to alcohol policy in recent years. The paper includes an analysis of major challenges currently facing the unit and how we are attempting to address them. It ends with some thoughts on what the unit intends doing to enhance the quality of its research, the capacity of its staff and its international standing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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12. Addiction sciences and its psychometrics: the measurement of alcohol-related problems.
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Midanik, Lorraine T., Greenfield, Thomas K., and Bond, Jason
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PSYCHOMETRICS ,ALCOHOLISM ,DIAGNOSIS of alcoholism ,ALCOHOL drinking ,POLITICAL science ,ALCOHOL ,ADDICTIONS ,RELIABILITY (Personality trait) ,TEST validity - Abstract
Aims The focus of this paper is on psychometric issues related to the measurement of alcohol problems. Methods Taking a broad perspective, this paper first examines several issues around the use of instruments to provide diagnostic categories in surveys, including dimensionality, severity and alcohol consumption. Secondly, a discussion of some of the political issues surrounding measurement of alcohol problems is presented, including some of the conflicts that arise when the psychometric properties of commonly used instruments are questioned. Finally, newer statistical techniques that can be applied to scale development in the alcohol field are examined, including non-linear multivariate analyses and confirmatory/hypothesis-based methods. Results and conclusions Continued scholarly discussion needs to be encouraged around these psychometric issues so that instrument development and maintenance in the addiction sciences becomes an ongoing academic pursuit as we strive to measure alcohol problems in the best way possible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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13. Addiction: a journal and its Invisible College.
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Edwards, Griffith
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PERIODICALS ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,ADDICTIONS ,PEOPLE with addiction ,SCHOLARLY publishing ,ACADEMIC discourse ,AUTHORSHIP ,EDITORS ,PUBLISHING - Abstract
Provenance This paper derives from a lecture given before the Society for the Study of Addiction in November 2004, on the author's retirement from the position of Editor-in-Chief of Addiction, one of the Society's journals. Aim To identify the live processes which have influenced the journal's evolution since its foundation in 1884. Conclusions Over the 120-year period a strong, continuing historical thread has been the fluctuating success of the journal's engagement with its ‘Invisible College’, the community which it seeks to serve. It is argued that the journal's future success will depend on its capacity to explore and nurture further this two-way relationship. Addiction is a journal with an active and clearly articulated, multiple vision of it purpose, and this vision is outlined. It dares to try to influence its future with the authority so to do rooted in its ability to reflect the aspirations and concerns of its readers. It is ‘a journal of the second kind’. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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14. Understanding and using time series analyses in addiction research.
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Beard, Emma, Marsden, John, Brown, Jamie, Tombor, Ildiko, Stapleton, John, Michie, Susan, and West, Robert
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SMOKING laws ,DRUG addiction ,MEDICAL research ,PUBLISHING ,SMOKING ,TIME series analysis ,SAMPLE size (Statistics) ,TOBACCO products ,DISEASE prevalence ,STATISTICAL models - Abstract
Time series analyses are statistical methods used to assess trends in repeated measurements taken at regular intervals and their associations with other trends or events, taking account of the temporal structure of such data. Addiction research often involves assessing associations between trends in target variables (e.g. population cigarette smoking prevalence) and predictor variables (e.g. average price of a cigarette), known as a multiple time series design, or interventions or events (e.g. introduction of an indoor smoking ban), known as an interrupted time series design. There are many analytical tools available, each with its own strengths and limitations. This paper provides addiction researchers with an overview of many of the methods available (GLM, GLMM, GLS, GAMM, ARIMA, ARIMAX, VAR, SVAR, VECM) and guidance on when and how they should be used, sample size det ermination, reporting and interpretation. The aim is to provide increased clarity for researchers proposing to undertake these analyses concerning what is likely to be acceptable for publication in journals such as Addiction. Given the large number of choices that need to be made when setting up time series models, the guidance emphasizes the importance of pre‐registering hypotheses and analysis plans before the analyses are undertaken. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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15. MISSING THE CONTINUUM.
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SOBELL, MARK B. and SOBELL, LINDA C.
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ADDICTIONS ,RESEARCH ,PSYCHOTHERAPIST-patient relations ,TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
In this article the authors provide their insights on the paper of D. Sellman on the facts concerning addiction. They explore the two points raised by Sellman at his paper such as the explanatory model rivalries and the critical role of therapists. Furthermore, they state the absence of a well-documented process of recovery at Sellman's paper.
- Published
- 2010
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16. A revised checklist for writing up research reports.
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West, Robert, Marsden, John, Humphreys, Keith, and Darke, Shane
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ADDICTIONS ,REPORT writing ,CANNABIS (Genus) ,DRUG addiction ,EDITORS ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,PHARMACEUTICAL industry ,QUALITY assurance ,INFORMATION needs - Abstract
The publication offers a checklist for its readers for writing research reports in the field of Addiction in order to improve the quality of initial submissions from contributors. Topics include the use of a title that precisely describes the focus of the research and does not use redundant phrases, a clear statement of the aims and research questions should be included in the introduction, and the proper format for citations and references.
- Published
- 2018
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17. The 10 most important things known about addiction.
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Sellman, Doug
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ADDICTIONS ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,CODEPENDENCY ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,EPIPHANIES ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,PSYCHIATRIC treatment ,MENTAL illness - Abstract
If you were asked: ‘What are the most important things we know about addiction?’ what would you say? This paper brings together a body of knowledge across multiple domains and arranged as a list of 10 things known about addiction, as a response to such a question. The 10 things are: (1) addiction is fundamentally about compulsive behaviour; (2) compulsive drug seeking is initiated outside of consciousness; (3) addiction is about 50% heritable and complexity abounds; (4) most people with addictions who present for help have other psychiatric problems as well; (5) addiction is a chronic relapsing disorder in the majority of people who present for help; (6) different psychotherapies appear to produce similar treatment outcomes; (7) ‘come back when you're motivated’ is no longer an acceptable therapeutic response; (8) the more individualized and broad-based the treatment a person with addiction receives, the better the outcome; (9) epiphanies are hard to manufacture; and (10) change takes time. The paper concludes with a call for unity between warring factions in the field to use the knowledge already known more effectively for the betterment of tangata whaiora (patients) suffering from addictive disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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18. Adherence to pharmacotherapy in patients with alcohol and opioid dependence.
- Author
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Weiss, Roger D.
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SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,OPIOID abuse ,ALCOHOLISM ,DRUG therapy ,DRUGS ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
An important factor that has thus far limited the effectiveness of pharmacotherapies for patients with alcohol and opioid dependence is poor adherence to medication regimens. This paper presents a review of issues related to medication adherence in patients with these substance use disorders.A literature review was conducted of English language publications relating to medication adherence among patients with alcohol or opioid dependence.The paper places the topic in the context of adherence difficulties among patients with a variety of chronic medical and psychiatric illnesses. Difficulties measuring adherence are discussed, and strategies to improve medication adherence are reviewed. These include specific interventions that prescribing clinicians can implement in their individual meetings with patients; the use of external reinforcers, such as positive and negative contingencies, and involvement of family members or significant others; and specific prescribing and dosing practices that may improve adherence.As the use of pharmacotherapy for substance-dependent patients increases, rigorous and innovative approaches to encourage medication adherence should be sought. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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19. A review of the published literature into cannabis withdrawal symptoms in human users.
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Smith, Neil T.
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DRUG withdrawal symptoms ,MARIJUANA abuse - Abstract
Recent experimental papers have been published suggesting the appearance of withdrawal symptoms upon the cessation of cannabis use in human users and proposing the introduction of a diagnostic category for such symptoms. Research also continues to be published into the physiological effects of cannabis on animals via self‐administration paradigms and the use of cannabinoid antagonists. Animal research does not provide a clear picture of a consistent withdrawal effect. The literature on withdrawal symptoms appearing in human users following the cessation of cannabis is investigated in this paper to clarify this issue further and enhance the scientific and lay debate on the status of the drug. Methodological weaknesses in the literature are highlighted. These include variable levels of drug‐dose administered in laboratory conditions, lack of controlled studies and the absence of definitions of the withdrawal syndrome sought. It is suggested that the studies conducted to date do not provide a strong evidence base for the drawing of any conclusions as to the existence of a cannabis withdrawal syndrome in human users, or as to the cause of symptoms reported by those abstaining from the drug. On the basis of current research cannabis cannot be said to provide as clear a withdrawal pattern as other drugs of abuse, such as opiates. However, cannabis also highlights the need for a further defining of withdrawal, in particular the position that rebound effects occupy in this phenomenon. It is concluded that more controlled research might uncover a diagnosable withdrawal syndrome in human users and that there may be a precedent for the introduction of a cannabis withdrawal syndrome before the exact root of it is known. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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20. Evolution meets biopsychosociality: an analysis of addictive behavior.
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Lende, Daniel H. and Smith, E. O.
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COMPULSIVE behavior ,DRUG abuse ,DOPAMINE - Abstract
Evolutionary theory can inform the biopsychosocial approach to addictive behavior through the use of adaptationist thinking, or how natural selection has shaped the mechanisms and processes underlying addiction. Covering how evolutionary theory relates to biology, psychology and sociality, this paper examines three components to drug use and abuse: a biological mechanism (mesolimbic dopamine), a developmental trajectory (attachment) and a social phylogeny (dominance, submission, social dependence). The paper argues for a salience (or wanting) view of the function of dopamine; outlines how attachment affects time perspective, closure of internal models and self‐regulation; and examines how inequality affects drug abuse and how social dependence and manipulative behaviors can play a role in relationships with drugs. The article concludes with an analysis of how the adaptive approach applies to interventions against addictive behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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21. Using Bayes factors for testing hypotheses about intervention effectiveness in addictions research.
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Beard, Emma, Dienes, Zoltan, Muirhead, Colin, and West, Robert
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HYPOTHESIS ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MEDICAL research ,PROBABILITY theory ,REFERENCE values ,RESEARCH funding ,T-test (Statistics) ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,SECONDARY analysis ,TREATMENT programs ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,RELATIVE medical risk ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Background and Aims It has been proposed that more use should be made of Bayes factors in hypothesis testing in addiction research. Bayes factors are the ratios of the likelihood of a specified hypothesis (e.g. an intervention effect within a given range) to another hypothesis (e.g. no effect). They are particularly important for differentiating lack of strong evidence for an effect and evidence for lack of an effect. This paper reviewed randomized trials reported in Addiction between January and June 2013 to assess how far Bayes factors might improve the interpretation of the data. Methods Seventy-five effect sizes and their standard errors were extracted from 12 trials. Seventy-three per cent ( n = 55) of these were non-significant (i.e. P > 0.05). For each non-significant finding a Bayes factor was calculated using a population effect derived from previous research. In sensitivity analyses, a further two Bayes factors were calculated assuming clinically meaningful and plausible ranges around this population effect. Results Twenty per cent ( n = 11) of the non-significant Bayes factors were < ⅓ and 3.6% ( n = 2) were > 3. The other 76.4% ( n = 42) of Bayes factors were between ⅓ and 3. Of these, 26 were in the direction of there being an effect (Bayes factor > 1 and < 3); 12 tended to favour the hypothesis of no effect (Bayes factor < 1 and > ⅓); and for four there was no evidence either way (Bayes factor = 1). In sensitivity analyses, 13.3% of Bayes Factors were < ⅓ ( n = 20), 62.7% ( n = 94) were between ⅓ and 3 and 24.0% ( n = 36) were > 3, showing good concordance with the main results. Conclusions Use of Bayes factors when analysing data from randomized trials of interventions in addiction research can provide important information that would lead to more precise conclusions than are obtained typically using currently prevailing methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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22. WHAT WE DO AND DO NOT KNOW ABOUT ADDICTION.
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ENGELS, RUTGER C. M. E.
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ADDICTIONS ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGY ,TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
In this article the author discusses his insights on the paper by psychiatrist Doug Sellman on the facts about addiction. He states several facts expressed by Sellman at his paper that he fully agrees including the neuropsychological processes, addiction trends, and treatment alliance relevance. Furthermore, he questions the possibility of creating a list of things known about addiction by Sellman.
- Published
- 2010
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23. Addiction Research Centres and the Nurturing of Creativity.
- Author
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Bühringer, Gerhard
- Subjects
MEDICAL research ,CREATIVE ability ,ALCOHOL drinking ,DRUG addiction ,NONPROFIT organizations ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,TREATMENT programs - Abstract
This paper describes the history and current structure of the Institut für Therapieforschung ( IFT) [Institute for Therapy Research] in Munich, as well as major research topics and factors which might contribute to a creative structure and atmosphere for innovative research in the addiction field. The institute was founded in 1973 as a non-profit non-governmental organization ( NGO) with a focus on applied research. Starting with behaviour therapy-based development and evaluation of programmes for alcohol, illicit drugs and smoking and the evaluation of treatment services, the institute gradually expanded its topics, covering prevention (1985) and epidemiology and policy evaluation (1990), and participated throughout this period in the development of guidelines and screening, diagnostic and clinical instruments. Later, the IFT tried to bridge the gap between basic sciences, applied research, health-care services and health policy, with a network of national and international contacts, including its own university engagements and collaborations with foreign research groups and national and European Union ( EU) agencies. Possible creativity-promoting factors on the institutional and individual levels are discussed, e.g. the collaboration of experienced senior researchers with carefully selected innovative doctoral students, considerable in-house and external training of young researchers and the early participation and presentation of their work at international conferences, independence from stakeholders in the field and the refusal of project funds which require external clearance of publications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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24. Can food be addictive? Public health and policy implications.
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Gearhardt, Ashley N., Grilo, Carlos M., DiLeone, Ralph J., Brownell, Kelly D., and Potenza, Marc N.
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PREVENTION of obesity ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,FOOD ,MARKETING ,OBESITY ,PUBLIC health ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,TOBACCO ,WORLD health ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Data suggest that hyperpalatable foods may be capable of triggering an addictive process. Although the addictive potential of foods continues to be debated, important lessons learned in reducing the health and economic consequences of drug addiction may be especially useful in combating food-related problems. In the current paper, we review the potential application of policy and public health approaches that have been effective in reducing the impact of addictive substances to food-related problems. Corporate responsibility, public health approaches, environmental change and global efforts all warrant strong consideration in reducing obesity and diet-related disease. Although there exist important differences between foods and addictive drugs, ignoring analogous neural and behavioral effects of foods and drugs of abuse may result in increased food-related disease and associated social and economic burdens. Public health interventions that have been effective in reducing the impact of addictive drugs may have a role in targeting obesity and related diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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- View/download PDF
25. Addiction and its sciences-philosophy.
- Author
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Foddy, Bennett
- Subjects
ADDICTIONS ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,OBSESSIVE-compulsive disorder ,NOSOLOGY ,FREE will & determinism ,MENTAL illness ,PHILOSOPHICAL analysis ,SCIENTIFIC literature ,PHILOSOPHICAL literature ,PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Philosophers have been writing about addiction continually since the 1990s, and a number of much older, broader philosophical theories are of direct relevance to the study of addiction. Yet the developments in the philosophical study of addiction have seldom been incorporated into the science of addiction. In this paper I focus upon two issues in the scientific literature: the disease classification of addiction and the claim that addictive behaviour is compulsive. While each of these views is open to debate on empirical grounds, there is a long history of philosophical work which must be engaged if these claims are to be justified in a philosophical sense. I begin by showing how the conceptual work of philosophers such as Boorse and Nordenfelt can be used to critique the claim that addiction is a disease. Following this, I demonstrate how deep philosophical concepts of freedom and willpower are embedded into scientists' claims about compulsion in drug addiction. These concepts are paradoxical and difficult, and they have consumed numerous contemporary philosophers of mind, such as Audi, Arpaly, Frankfurt, Mele, Wallace and Watson, among many others. I show how problems can arise when scientists sidestep the work of these philosophers, and I explain where scientists should seek to include, and sometimes exclude, philosophical concepts. Many philosophical concepts and theories can be of use to addiction science. The philosophical work must be understood and acknowledged if the science is to progress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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26. Using theories of behaviour change to inform interventions for addictive behaviours.
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Webb, Thomas L., Sniehotta, Falko F., and Michie, Susan
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COMPULSIVE behavior ,THEORY ,SUBSTANCE abuse prevention ,ADDICTIONS ,BEHAVIOR modification ,OPERANT behavior ,SOCIAL cognitive theory ,CONTROL theory (Engineering) ,PLANNED behavior theory - Abstract
Aims This paper reviews a set of theories of behaviour change that are used outside the field of addiction and considers their relevance for this field. Methods Ten theories are reviewed in terms of (i) the main tenets of each theory, (ii) the implications of the theory for promoting change in addictive behaviours and (iii) studies in the field of addiction that have used the theory. An augmented feedback loop model based on Control Theory is used to organize the theories and to show how different interventions might achieve behaviour change. Results Briefly, each theory provided the following recommendations for intervention: Control Theory: prompt behavioural monitoring, Goal-Setting Theory: set specific and challenging goals, Model of Action Phases: form 'implementation intentions', Strength Model of Self-Control: bolster self-control resources, Social Cognition Models (Protection Motivation Theory, Theory of Planned Behaviour, Health Belief Model): modify relevant cognitions, Elaboration Likelihood Model: consider targets' motivation and ability to process information, Prototype Willingness Model: change perceptions of the prototypical person who engages in behaviour and Social Cognitive Theory: modify self-efficacy. Conclusions There are a range of theories in the field of behaviour change that can be applied usefully to addiction, each one pointing to a different set of modifiable determinants and/or behaviour change techniques. Studies reporting interventions should describe theoretical basis, behaviour change techniques and mode of delivery accurately so that effective interventions can be understood and replicated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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27. What economics can contribute to the addiction sciences.
- Author
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Caulkins, Jonathan P. and Nicosia, Nancy
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ADDICTIONS ,ECONOMICS ,DRUG addiction ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,ALCOHOLISM ,PHARMACEUTICAL policy ,DRUG control ,TOBACCO use ,NICOTINE addiction - Abstract
Aims The addiction sciences are intrinsically multi-disciplinary, and economics is among the disciplines that offer useful perspectives on the complex behaviors surrounding substance abuse. This paper summarizes contributions economics has made in the past and could make in the future towards understanding how illegal markets operate, how prices affect use, how use generates various consequences, and how policy shapes all three. Methods Review of literature, concentrating on illegal drugs as insights concerning markets are particularly salient, although we also mention relevant studies from the alcohol and tobacco fields. Findings and Conclusions Economics offers tools and topical expertise that usefully complement other disciplines associated traditionally with the addiction sciences. Its value goes far beyond the ability to monetize non-monetary outcomes or to calculate a cost-benefit ratio. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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28. Therapeutic alliance, patient behaviour and dropout in a drug rehabilitation programme: the moderating effect of clinical subpopulations.
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Cournoyer, Louis‐Georges, Brochu, Serge, Landry, Michel, and Bergeron, Jacques
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THERAPEUTIC alliance ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,DRUG addiction ,COMORBIDITY ,DUAL diagnosis ,DRUG abuse counselor & patient ,SCIENTIFIC literature ,MENTAL health ,POPULATION - Abstract
Aim Treatment dropout is an important concern for professionals working in mental health. While this problem is common, the highest attrition rates have been observed in drug rehabilitation programmes. The present study focuses on the therapeutic alliance, a process variable that has been associated repeatedly with positive treatment outcome in the scientific literature. Respondent behaviour indicative of commitment or resistance to treatment was examined in combination with therapist prognoses. Design A total of 248 subjects, classified into three subpopulations (justice, n = 50; mental health, n = 53; comparison group, n = 145), participated in the study. Analyses aimed at predicting dropout were conducted using Cox proportional-hazards regressions. The moderating effect of sub-population was tested. Measurements Respondents completed a multi-dimensional measure of alliance [California Psychotherapeutic Alliance Scale (CALPAS-P)]. Therapists rated the behaviour of respondents in treatment and made prognoses about perseverance and improvement. Findings An increased risk of dropout was predicted when patients viewed themselves as less committed and perceived the therapist as less understanding and less involved. Therapist prognosis of perseverance was also predictive of dropout. The relationship between patient/therapist evaluations and dropout is affected differently across subpopulations by means of a moderation effect. Conclusion This paper demonstrates the capacity to predict dropout by measuring therapeutic alliance, therapist prognoses and therapist appraisal of patient behaviour. Moreover, the moderation effect of clinical subpopulation on treatment process variables and dropout is supported in the context of drug rehabilitation programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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29. The legitimacy of addiction treatment in a world of smart people.
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Klingemann, Harald and Bergmark, Anders
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SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,ADDICTIONS ,EVIDENCE-based social work ,SOCIAL services ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL laws ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Aim This paper discusses what type of legitimacy underpins addiction treatment in contemporary western societies. Method Broad review of the relevant literature. Conclusions The legitimacy of professional interventions and the future of service provision will depend largely on the relationship between the professional and the lay referral system. These in turn are intertwined with macro-societal changes. The basic categories in this relationship are, on one hand, the idea of evidence-based practice (i.e. the notion of using the most accurate scientific support for the choice of treatment interventions), and on the other hand the consumer perspective, which conceptualizes addiction treatment as an interactive process between the treatment provider and the consumer. The acceptance of addiction treatment depends in most cases on the client who chooses from a whole range of informal and formal problem solutions. To an extent, experts are thus controlled by their lay counterparts and need their consent to operate and succeed. This process is complicated by the trend towards evidence-based practice, which demands transparency and rigorous procedures and carries with it the basis for distrust in expert knowledge by displaying openly that every statement of fact is open to revision, and thus, to a certain extent, characterized by uncertainty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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30. Reconsidering the evaluation of addiction treatment: from retrospective follow-up to concurrent recovery monitoring.
- Author
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McLellan, A. Thomas, McKay, James R., Forman, Robert, Cacciola, John, and Kemp, Jack
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DRUG abuse ,ADDICTIONS ,COGNITIVE therapy ,DECISION making ,HYPERTENSION ,BLOOD circulation disorders - Abstract
Historically, addiction treatments have been delivered and evaluated under an acute-care format. Fixed amounts or durations of treatment have been provided and their effects evaluated 6–12 months after completion of care. The explicit expectation of treatment has been enduring reductions in substance use, improved personal health and social function, generally referred to as‘recovery’. In contrast, treatments for chronic illnesses such as diabetes, hypertension and asthma have been provided for indeterminate periods and their effects evaluated during the course of those treatments. Here the expectations are for most of the same results, but only during the course of continuing care and monitoring. The many similarities between addiction and mainstream chronic illnesses stand in contrast to the differences in the ways addiction is conceptualized, treated and evaluated. This paper builds upon established methods of during-treatment evaluation developed for the treatment of other chronic illnesses and suggests a parallel evaluation system for out-patient, continuing-care forms of addiction treatment. The suggested system retains traditional patient-level, behavioral outcome measures of recovery, but suggests that these outcomes should be collected and reported immediately and regularly by clinicians at the beginning of addiction treatment sessions, as a way of evaluating recovery progress and making decisions about continuing care. We refer to this paradigm as‘concurrent recovery monitoring’ and discuss its potential for producing more timely, efficient, clinically relevant and accountable evaluations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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31. Measures and models of nicotine dependence: positive reinforcement.
- Author
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Glautier, Steven
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TOBACCO use ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,ADDICTIONS ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,SMOKING & psychology - Abstract
This paper addresses the problem of assessing nicotine dependence. The main objective is to develop theory-led suggestions for measures that will be relevant in the early phases of tobacco use, as well as in established smokers. Theoretical models of addiction falling into the general class of `positive reinforcement theories' were identified and reviewed. From this review a number of drug effects and patterns of behavior were distilled and categorized as either vulnerability or dependence indicators. A comparison of those features with the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) and Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV) diagnostic systems shows that neither system includes detailed assessment of vulnerability indicators. It is argued that measurement of vulnerability indicators, in addition to dependence indicators, may add to the predictive validity of assessments carried out in early career tobacco users, especially where there is limited evidence of established dependence. In addition, it is suggested that examination of measures that differentiate a subgroup of early career smokers termed `rapid accelerators' may prove profitable and enable identification of the key parameters of nicotine reinforcement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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- View/download PDF
32. Prices, policies and youth smoking, May 2001.
- Author
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Liang, Lan, Chaloupka, Frank, Nichter, Mark, and Clayton, Richard
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SMOKING prevention ,SUBSTANCE use of youth ,ECONOMICS ,TOBACCO use ,CONTEXT effects (Psychology) ,PREVENTION ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
ABSTRACT Youth smoking continues to be an important public health problem. Many policy tools designed to reduce youth smoking are based on economic principles. This paper describes the economic and policy context of tobacco use aiming at reducing youth smoking and explains the economic rationale for tobacco control tools such as excise tax and price, clean indoor air laws, youth access laws and the broad provision of health information to the public. An overview of economic models of addiction provides the framework for empirical analysis of the impact of these policies. This is followed by a summary of the empirical evidence of the effectiveness of various tobacco control tools that are primarily economic in nature. The most consistent finding in this literature is that higher cigarette prices discourage youth smoking. Compared to the effects of cigarette taxation and price on youth smoking, the evidence on the effectiveness of the youth access laws and clean indoor air laws are still mixed and inconclusive. More research is needed to address issues such as: (1) the effects of gender, age, race and socio-economic status on the relationship between tobacco control policies and youth smoking; (2) better measurement of the outcome variables to account for the multi-dimensional nature of dependence; and (3) the effects of excise taxes and other tobacco control policies with regard to a host of dimensions of smoking such as initiation, cessation, and more generally the trajectories of tobacco use that would include patterns of progression, maintenance, regression, cessation, and relapse. More frequently collected longitudinal data than those currently available are needed to address the above issues. Understanding smoking behavior cannot be achieved without incorporating familial and other social contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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33. A pathways model of problem and pathological gambling.
- Author
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Blaszczynski, Alex and Nower, Lia
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COMPULSIVE gambling ,BEHAVIOR - Abstract
ABSTRACT At the moment, there is no single conceptual theoretical model of gambling that adequately accounts for the multiple biological, psychological and ecological variables contributing to the development of pathological gambling. Advances in this area are hampered by imprecise definitions of pathological gambling, failure to distinguish between gambling problems and problem gamblers and a tendency to assume that pathological gamblers form one, homogeneous population with similar psychological principles applying equally to all members of the class. The purpose of this paper is to advance a pathways model that integrates the complex array of biological, personality, developmental, cognitive, learning theory and ecological determinants of problem and pathological gambling. It is proposed that three distinct subgroups of gamblers manifesting impaired control over their behaviour can be identified. These groups include (a) behaviourally conditioned problem gamblers, (b) emotionally vulnerable problem gamblers and (c) antisocial, impulsivist problem gamblers. The implications for clinical management are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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34. The role of brain emotional systems in addictions: a neuro-evolutionary perspective and new 'self-report' animal model.
- Author
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Panksepp, Jaak, Knutson, Brian, and Burgdorf, Jeff
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DRUG abuse ,BRAIN - Abstract
The evolutionary significance of neurochemical events in the brain has received minimal attention in the field of addiction research. Likewise, the general failure of neuroscientists to postulate how basic brain circuits might mediate emotional urges has retarded the development of scientific perspectives that could inform new inquiries into the underlying dynamics and treatment of addictions. In this paper, we revisit the argument that prototypically abused substances activate or alter specific emotional brain systems that were evolutionarily designed to signal potential increments or decrements in fitness. We then discuss two distinct emotional systems (reward seeking and separation distress) which may track different types of potential changes in fitness. Based on this evolutionarily inspired approach, we illustrate how a mammalian model of emotion (i.e. rodent ultrasonic vocalizations) may enable scientists to predict drug‐related phenomena such as abuse potential, anatomical location of mediating neural substrates, and the psychological impact of withdrawal. We conclude by discussing some therapeutic and social implications of examining drug addiction processes with multiple emotional brain systems in mind. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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35. Postoperative buprenorphine continuation in stabilized buprenorphine patients: A population cohort study.
- Author
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Hauck, Tanya S., Ladha, Karim S., Le Foll, Bernard, Wijeysundera, Duminda N., and Kurdyak, Paul
- Subjects
PERIOPERATIVE care ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,BUPRENORPHINE ,OPERATIVE surgery ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,ODDS ratio ,OPIOID analgesics ,DISCHARGE planning ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background and Aims: Sudden discontinuation of buprenorphine in the treatment of opioid use disorder can increase the risk of subsequent relapse and overdose. Little is known about buprenorphine use in the perioperative period. The aim of this study was to determine the rate of buprenorphine continuation after hospital discharge following surgery and factors associated with continuation. Design: A population‐based retrospective cohort study was conducted using administrative data from Ontario, Canada, between 2012 and 2018. The cohort included individuals on continuous buprenorphine prior to surgery. Logistic regression modeling was used to estimate the association of buprenorphine continuation with demographic, opioid agonist treatment, surgical and health service use factors. Setting: Administrative databases from Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES) were used, which capture the Ontario, Canada, population. The data sets describe physician billing, monitoring of controlled substances and hospital discharges. Participants: Adults (≥ 18 years, n = 2176) had received a buprenorphine/naloxone product continuously for at least 60 days for the treatment of opioid use disorder and subsequently underwent a surgical procedure. Measurements Continuation (versus discontinuation) of buprenorphine prescriptions in the 14 days after surgical discharge was recommended. Exposures included demographic, comorbidity, opioid agonist treatment, surgical and health service use characteristics. Findings About 176 (8.1%) of the 2176 patients discontinued buprenorphine after surgery. Inpatient surgery (versus ambulatory) was associated with reduced odds of continuation, with an unadjusted odds ratio (OR) of 0.17 [95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.12–0.25] and an adjusted OR of 0.16 (95% CI = 0.11–0.23) after accounting for age, sex, rural residence, neighborhood income quintile, Charlson comorbidity index, psychiatric hospitalizations in the past 5 years and recent dispensed supply of buprenorphine (number needed to harm of 6.6). Conclusions: In Ontario, Canada, from 2012 to 2018, most patients receiving continuous preoperative buprenorphine therapy continued buprenorphine use after surgery. Inpatient surgery was a strong predictor of discontinuation compared with ambulatory procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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36. Gaming disorder and stigma‐related judgements of gaming individuals: An online randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Galanis, Christina R., Weber, Nathan, Delfabbro, Paul H., Billieux, Joel, and King, Daniel L.
- Subjects
MENTAL illness risk factors ,JUDGMENT (Psychology) ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,SOCIAL stigma ,RISK assessment ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,VIDEO games ,STATISTICAL sampling ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,ADULTS - Abstract
Background and aims: The inclusion of gaming disorder (GD) in the International Classification of Diseases 11th Revision (ICD‐11) has generated scholarly debate, including claims about its potential stigmatizing effects on the wider gaming population. The present study aimed to estimate the effect of addiction‐based and non‐addiction–based conceptualizations of problem gaming on stigma of gamers. Design: This preregistered experiment involved a 2 (health information: addiction‐related or non‐addiction‐related) × 3 (vignette: problem, regular or casual gamer) randomized, between‐subjects design. Setting: An international sample of participants was recruited via Prolific in June and July 2021. Participants: Participants were eligible (n = 1228) if they were aged 35 to 50 years, played video games for no more than 6 hours per week and did not endorse DSM‐5 or ICD‐11 criteria for GD. Intervention and comparator: Participants were provided with an explanation of problem gaming as related to either an addictive disorder (i.e. 'addiction' explanation) or personal choice and lifestyle factors (i.e. 'non‐addiction' explanation). Measurements The Attribution Questionnaire (AQ) and Universal Stigma Scale (USS) assessed stigma toward each gamer vignette. Vignettes described a problem gamer (with features of GD); a regular gamer (frequent gaming; some life interference); and a casual gamer (infrequent gaming; no life interference). Findings Problem gamer vignettes (mean [M] = 113.3; 95% CI = 111.5–115.4) received higher AQ stigma ratings than regular (M = 94.0; 95% CI = 91.9–95.9) and casual gamers (M = 80.1; 95% CI = 78.2–82.1). Although significant, the effect of health information type on AQ stigma ratings was negligible (addiction group [M = 97.6; 95% CI = 95.9–99.1], non‐addiction group [M = 94.1; 95% CI = 92.6–95.8]). However, the addiction information group scored lower on USS blame and responsibility than the non‐addiction information group with at least a small effect (99.1% confidence). Conclusions: Framing of problem gaming as an addictive disorder or non‐addictive activity appears to have a negligible effect on stigma of different gamers among middle‐age adults with minimal gaming experience. The concept of 'gaming addiction' seems unlikely to be an important influence on public stigma of gaming. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Empowerment through education and science: three intersecting strands in the career of Griffith Edwards.
- Author
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Crome, Ilana
- Subjects
TREATMENT of addictions ,EDUCATION of physicians ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,SUBSTANCE abuse diagnosis ,LEADERS ,DUAL diagnosis ,EDUCATION ,SCIENCE ,COMORBIDITY ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
This paper describes three important strands in the career of Griffith Edwards that define him as a leader and an innovator. Believing that education and science were critical for the development of addiction as a profession and as a field of inquiry, his approach was multi-faceted: educating all doctors to appreciate the fundamental issues in addiction; training psychiatrists in the complexity of 'dual diagnosis' and specific specialist intervention; and teaching that addiction could be a chronic condition which required care management over the life course. These three inter-related areas are directly related to the need for a range of practitioners to have an understanding of addiction so that patients can be properly managed. The greater our understanding of the nature of addiction behaviour, the more likely the potential to optimize treatment and train practitioners from different professional disciplines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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38. Diagnostic accuracy for self‐reported methamphetamine use versus oral fluid test as the reference standard in a methamphetamine‐dependent intervention trial population.
- Author
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Carter, Gregory, Spittal, Matthew J., Glowacki, Linda, Gerostamoulos, Dimitri, Dietze, Paul, Sinclair, Barbara, Arunogiri, Shalini, Berk, Michael, Lubman, Dan I., Manning, Victoria, Higgs, Peter, Quinn, Brendan, Baker, Amanda, Dean, Olivia M., Turner, Alyna, and McKetin, Rebecca
- Subjects
REFERENCE values ,DRUG addiction ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,PREDICTIVE tests ,SELF-evaluation ,METHAMPHETAMINE ,FLUIDS ,RESEARCH funding ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SECONDARY analysis ,DRUG abusers ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Aims: Treatment of methamphetamine dependence requires monitoring of recent use or abstinence. Self‐report is commonly used for routine monitoring, but the accuracy of self‐report is not established. For the treating clinician, the key accuracy statistic is the negative predictive value (NPV). The study aim was to estimate the NPV of self‐reported non‐use of methamphetamine compared with an oral fluid reference standard. Design, Setting and Participants: This study was a secondary (subgroup) analysis from a randomized controlled pharmacotherapy trial. Three Australian outpatient addiction services took part. Particpants were 139 people dependent on methamphetamine. Measurements: Weekly oral fluid samples over 12 weeks to determine methamphetamine (and amphetamine) concentrations were used as the reference standard. Self‐report of any methamphetamine use in the previous 7 days by the time‐line follow‐back method was the index test. Standard diagnostic accuracy statistics were calculated for all available paired episodes (n = 1134). Three NPV values were calculated: unadjusted NPV and NPV adjusted for clustering of observations through logistic regression and generalized estimating equation (GEE). We also calculated the NPVs for a range of prevalence rates of methamphetamine use, for the calculated levels of sensitivity and specificity. Findings Sensitivity was 96.4% [95% confidence interval (CI) = 95–97.5], specificity was 63.7% (95% CI = 57.3–69.8) and positive predictive value (PPV) was 90.8% (95% CI = 88.8–92.6). The unadjusted NPV was 82.7% (95% CI = 76.5–87.9), adjusted NPV by logistic regression 82.7% (95% CI = 73.9–91.5) and GEE 76.8% (95% CI = 66.8–86.8). At a methamphetamine use prevalence of 5%, the estimated NPV would be 99.7% (95% CI = 99.6–99.9) and at 95% prevalence, 48.2% (95% CI = 39.6–57.0). Conclusions: Self‐report of no recent methamphetamine use appears to be sufficiently accurate to be clinically useful at the expected prevalence rates of methamphetamine use in clinical treatment settings. If generalizable to clinical settings, where these tests are routinely conducted, this may permit a reduction in the frequency and cost of oral fluid assays. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. UNDERSTANDING THE HEALTH OF POPULATIONS AND OF INDIVIDUALS.
- Author
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GALEA, SANDRO
- Subjects
RESEARCH evaluation ,ALCOHOLISM - Abstract
The article presents commentary about the research paper "Does alcohol increase the risk of overdose death: the need for a translational approach," by M. Hickman, A. Lingford-Hughes, C. Bailey, J. Macleod, D. Nutt, and G. Henderson in a previous issue of this journal. The author commends the researchers for raising awareness of a multi-disciplinary approach to addiction science. The author believes that researchers need different methods to deal with these different questions. It would help to have stronger accuracy in understanding asked questions.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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40. Non‐invasive brain stimulation for smoking cessation: a systematic review and meta‐analysis.
- Author
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Petit, Benjamin, Dornier, Alexandre, Meille, Vincent, Demina, Anastasia, and Trojak, Benoit
- Subjects
DEEP brain stimulation ,ONLINE information services ,MEDICAL databases ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,RELATIVE medical risk ,SMOKING cessation ,META-analysis ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,DRUG abstinence ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) ,TRANSCRANIAL direct current stimulation ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MEDLINE ,DATA analysis software ,COMPULSIVE behavior - Abstract
Background and Aims: Non‐invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) methods have showed promising results for the treatment of tobacco use disorder, but little is known about the efficacy of NIBS on sustained tobacco abstinence. We aimed to assess its effectiveness for long‐term smoking cessation. Methods: Systematic review and meta‐analysis of randomized controlled trials (RCT). PubMed, Cochrane library, Embase, PsycINFO and clinical trials registries were systematically searched for relevant studies up to May 2021. Relevant studies included adult smokers seeking smoking cessation, included in an RCT using NIBS [specifically repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) and transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS)], and with follow‐up of more than 4 weeks. There were no restrictions on location. Abstinence rates in the active NIBS groups were compared with abstinence rates in sham NIBS or in usual treatment groups, from 4 weeks to 12 months following the quit attempt. Smoking abstinence was measured on an intention‐to‐treat basis and we used risk ratios (RRs) as measures of effect size. Results: Seven studies were included (n = 699 patients). In all included studies, the control groups were receiving sham NIBS and only data from 3 to 6 months were analysable. By pooling the seven included studies, the RR of sustained abstinence of any form of NIBS relative to sham NIBS was 2.39 [95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.26–4.55; I2 = 40%]. Subgroup analyses found that the RR was even higher when excitatory rTMS was used on the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (RR = 4.34; 95% CI = 1.69–11.18; I2 = 0%) or when using deep rTMS targeting the lateral prefrontal cortex and insula bilaterally (RR = 4.64; 95% CI = 1.61–13.39; I2 = 0%). A high risk of bias was found in four included studies. We also determined, using grades of recommendation, assessment, development and evaluation, that overall there was a low level of confidence in the results. Conclusion: Non‐invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) may improve smoking abstinence rates from 3 to 6 months after quitting smoking, compared with sham NIBS or usual treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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41. Stigma‐related arguments against gaming disorder: a call for research.
- Author
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Galanis, Christina R., Delfabbro, Paul H., and King, Daniel L.
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VIDEO games & psychology ,PSYCHIATRY ,SOCIAL stigma ,PUBLIC health ,RECREATION ,INTERNET addiction ,PSYCHOLOGICAL factors - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Affected other interventions: a systematic review and meta‐analysis across addictions.
- Author
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Merkouris, Stephanie S., Rodda, Simone N., and Dowling, Nicki A.
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TREATMENT of drug addiction ,ALCOHOLISM treatment ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,CINAHL database ,META-analysis ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,GAMES ,SATISFACTION ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,GAMBLING ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MENTAL depression ,MEDLINE ,INTERNET addiction ,ODDS ratio ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,COMPULSIVE behavior - Abstract
Background and Aims: Individuals impacted by someone else's alcohol, illicit drug, gambling and gaming problems (affected others) experience extensive harms. To our knowledge, this is the first systematic review and meta‐analysis to determine the effectiveness of psychosocial interventions delivered to affected others across addictions. Methods: This review adhered to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta‐Analyses. An electronic database search (PsycInfo, Medline, Cinahl and EMBASE) of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) published until August 2021 was conducted. RCTs with passive control groups, evaluating psychosocial tertiary interventions delivered to affected others of people with addictions (problematic alcohol use, substance use, gambling or gaming) that did not require the involvement of the addicted person, were included. Results: Twenty included studies, published in 22 articles, mainly evaluated interventions for alcohol use, followed by gambling and illicit drugs, with none investigating gaming interventions. The interventions mainly targeted partners/spouses and focused upon improving affected other outcomes, addicted person outcomes or both. Meta‐analyses revealed beneficial intervention effects over control groups on some affected other (depressive symptomatology [standardized mean difference (SMD) = −0.48, 95% confidence interval (CI) = −0.67, –0.29], life satisfaction (SMD = −0.37, 95% CI = −0.71, −0.03) and coping style (SMD = −1.33, 95% CI = −1.87, –0.79), addicted person [treatment entry, risk ratio (RR) = 0.86, 95% CI = 0.75–0.98] and relationship functioning outcomes (marital discord, SMD = −0.40, 95% CI = −0.61, −0.18) at post‐intervention. No beneficial intervention effects were identified at short‐term follow‐up (4–11 months post‐treatment). The beneficial intervention effects identified at post‐treatment remained when limiting to studies of alcohol use and therapist‐delivered interventions. Conclusions: Psychosocial interventions delivered to affected others of people with addictions (problematic alcohol use, substance use, gambling or gaming) may be effective in improving some, but not all, affected other (depression, life satisfaction, coping), addicted person (treatment) and relationship functioning (marital discord) outcomes for affected others across the addictions, but the conclusion remains tentative due to limited studies and methodological limitations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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43. The 1988 US Surgeon General's report Nicotine Addiction: how well has it stood up to three more decades of research?
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West, Robert and Cox, Sharon
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PREVENTION of drug addiction ,HEALTH policy ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,NICOTINE ,SURGEONS ,PHYSICIANS' attitudes ,DESIRE ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
The article discusses the 1988 U.S. Surgeon General's Report, entitled "Nicotine Addiction" which presented the evidence that tobacco is addictive and showed that nicotine lies at the heart of this addiction. Topics include evidence emerging from studies on tobacco use and nicotine products, evidence emerging from electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes), and findings of the report on tobacco control.
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- 2022
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44. Stigma and the addiction paradigm for obesity: lessons from 1950s America.
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Rasmussen, Nicolas
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ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,ENDOCRINOLOGY ,FOOD habits ,OBESITY ,PSYCHOLOGY ,PUBLIC health ,PUBLIC opinion ,SOCIAL stigma ,THEORY ,HISTORY - Abstract
Aims To discuss an historical episode in which obesity was conceptualized as an addictive disorder and declared to be a major epidemic in the early postwar United States. This history illuminates past consequences of framing obesity as an addiction in ways that may inform constructive policy responses today. Methods Review of secondary and primary sources, including archival documents, relating to obesity in biomedical and popular thought of the 1940s and 1950s. Results In the United States in the late 1940s and 1950s, new medical thinking about obesity reinterpreted overweight and obesity as chiefly the consequence of addiction (understood in the then dominant psychodynamic theory as a psychological defect, oral fixation). This new conception was rapidly taken up in popular discourse and clinical practice, with adverse effects through amplification of weight stigma. Further, in the conservative political context, the addiction concept contributed to an ineffective policy response to the alarming new epidemiological evidence about obesity's consequences. Despite a lack of evidence for efficacy of the intervention, public health efforts focused on correcting individual eating behaviour among obese people by encouraging self-help in lay groups modelled, in part, on Alcoholics Anonymous. Population-level intervention was neglected. Conclusions Current public health policy initiatives must be mindful of the risks of reframing obesity as an addiction. These include inadvertently reinforcing stigma, narrowing responses to those aiming to modify individual behaviour and biology and neglecting population policies aiming to reduce the consumption of energy-dense foods, as all occurred in the 1950s United States. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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45. Reducing craving and consumption in individuals with drug addiction, obesity or overeating through neuromodulation intervention: a systematic review and meta‐analysis of its follow‐up effects.
- Author
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Song, Sensen, Zilverstand, Anna, Gui, Wenjun, Pan, Xuefei, and Zhou, Xiaolin
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DESIRE ,FOOD consumption ,DRUG addiction ,HYPERPHAGIA ,NEUROMODULATION ,PREVENTION of obesity ,META-analysis ,SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
Background and aims: Non‐invasive brain stimulation has shown potential in clinical applications aiming at reducing craving and consumption levels in individuals with drug addiction or overeating behaviour. However, it is unclear whether these intervention effects are maintained over time. This study aimed to measure the immediate, short‐ and long‐term effects of excitatory transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) and high‐frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) targeting at dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) in people with drug addiction or overeating. Methods: A systematic review and random effects meta‐analysis. We included 20 articles (total of 22 studies using randomized controlled trials: 3 alcohol dependence, 3 drug dependence, 12 smoking, 4 overeating; total: 720 participants) from January 2000 to June 2020, which reported at least one follow‐up assessment of craving, consumption or abstinence levels after the intervention. We compared effects of active versus sham stimulation immediately after the intervention and at the last follow‐up assessment, as compared with baseline. Results: Excitatory neuromodulation of dlPFC activity reduced craving and consumption immediately after the intervention (craving: g = 0.734, CI = 0.447–1.021, P < 0.001; consumption: g = 0.527, CI = 0.309–0.745; P < 0.001), as well as during short‐, mid‐ and long‐term abstinence (craving: g = 0.677, CI = 0.440–0.914, P < 0.001; consumption: g = 0.445, CI = 0.245–0.645, P < 0.001; abstinence levels: g = 0.698, CI = 0.433–0.963, P < 0.001; average time of follow‐up: 84 ± 83 days after last stimulation). Additional analysis demonstrated that the intervention effects were sustained in all populations studied (food, nicotine, alcohol or drug abuse) and with both stimulation techniques used (rTMS, tDCS). Interventions targeting at the left (vs right) hemisphere may be more effective. Conclusions: Excitatory neuromodulation targeting the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex appears to lead to a sustained reduction of craving and consumption in individuals with addiction or overeating behaviour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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46. Addicted to smoking or addicted to nicotine? A focus group study on perceptions of nicotine and addiction among US adult current smokers, former smokers, non‐smokers and dual users of cigarettes and e‐cigarettes.
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Loud, Emily E., Duong, Hue Trong, Henderson, Katherine C., Reynolds, Reed M., Ashley, David L., Thrasher, James F., and Popova, Lucy
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COMPULSIVE behavior ,FOCUS groups ,ELECTRONIC cigarettes ,RESEARCH methodology ,NICOTINE ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,SMOKING ,THEMATIC analysis ,TOBACCO products - Abstract
Background and Aims: In 2017, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) proposed to reduce nicotine in cigarettes to minimally or non‐addictive levels. This study qualitatively explored perceptions of nicotine and addiction, both independently and in response to messages communicating about nicotine reduction. Design Qualitative study using focus groups. Participants described their perceptions of nicotine and addiction and their responses to messages about the nicotine reduction. Setting: Atlanta, GA and San Francisco, CA, USA. Semi‐structured focus groups were conducted virtually in Spring 2020. Participants: Exclusive smokers (n = 27), dual users (of cigarettes and electronic cigarettes) (n = 25), former smokers (n = 32) and young adult non‐smokers (n = 31). Measurement Inductive thematic analysis of transcripts was conducted, and results were compared across smoking status groups. Findings Participants across all smoking status groups associated nicotine with tobacco products, but consistently misperceived that nicotine caused disease. Perceptions of addiction were largely negative and varied by smoking status. Experienced smokers (exclusive smokers, former smokers and dual users) differentiated tobacco use from other addictions and minimized their own experiences of addiction. Perceptions of addiction across experienced smokers included not only the chemical properties of nicotine, but also the behavioral aspects of tobacco use, including oral fixation, having a smoking routine and response to internal and external cues. In response to messages, many believed that removing the nicotine would not make cigarettes less addictive because of the multi‐factorial nature of smoking addiction that includes non‐pharmacological cues. Conclusions: Perceptions of nicotine and addiction among non‐smokers, former smokers, exclusive smokers and dual users of cigarettes and e‐cigarettes vary based on smoking status, but there is a common tendency to believe that nicotine is addictive, that addiction results from more than just nicotine, and that very low nicotine cigarettes will not necessarily reduce the addictiveness of cigarettes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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47. DSM-V: TIME FOR CHANGE.
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LING, WALTER
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DRUG addiction ,CLASSIFICATION of mental disorders ,NOSOLOGY ,TERMS & phrases - Abstract
In this article the author discusses the aspects of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder (DSM-V) in doctor Charles O'Brein's paper. He mentions that O'Brein stresses that dependence was observed mostly by non-clinicians with the debate emerge in the 1980s. He points out that the term dependence has resulted to confusion since it already had an organized meaning in medicine.
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- 2011
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48. Addiction Research Centres and the Nurturing of Creativity. Monitoring the European drug situation: the ongoing challenge for the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA).
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Griffiths, Paul, Mounteney, Jane, Lopez, Dominique, Zobel, Frank, and Götz, Wolfgang
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GOVERNMENT agencies ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,DRUG monitoring ,MEDICAL research ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,ORGANIZATIONAL goals ,HISTORY - Abstract
ABSTRACT The European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) is the designated hub for drug-related information in the European Union. The organization's role is to provide the European Union (EU) and its Member States with a factual overview of European drug problems and a common information framework to support the drugs debate. In order to achieve its mission, the EMCDDA coordinates and relies on a network of 30 national monitoring centres, the Reitox National Focal Points. The Centre publishes on a wide range of drug-related topics, across epidemiology, interventions, laws and policies. Every November, the EMCDDA publishes its Annual Report, providing a yearly update on the European drug situation, translated into 23 EU languages. In line with its founding regulation, the EMCDDA has a role acting as an interface between the worlds of science and policy. While not a research centre in the formal sense, the results the Centre generates serve as catalysts for new research questions and help to identify priorities. Current challenges facing the agency include continuing to increase scientific standards while maintaining a strong institutional role, as well as supporting European efforts to identify, share and codify best practice in the drugs field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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49. Addiction research centres and the nurturing of creativity: The Centre for Addictions Research of British Columbia, Canada.
- Author
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Stockwell, Tim, Reist, Dan, Macdonald, Scott, Benoit, Cecilia, and Jansson, Mikael
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RESEARCH institutes ,RECOVERY movement ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,REHABILITATION of people with addiction ,ADDICTIONS - Abstract
The Centre for Addictions Research of British Columbia (CARBC) was established as a multi-campus and multi-disciplinary research centre administered by the University of Victoria (UVic) in late 2003. Its core funding is provided from interest payments on an endowment of CAD$10.55 million. It is supported by a commitment to seven faculty appointments in various departments at UVic. The Centre has two offices, an administration and research office in Victoria and a knowledge exchange unit in Vancouver. The two offices are collaborating on the implementation of CARBC's first 5-year plan which seeks to build capacity in British Columbia for integrated multi-disciplinary research and knowledge exchange in the areas substance use, addictions and harm reduction. Present challenges include losses to the endowment caused by the 2008/2009 economic crisis and difficulties negotiating faculty positions with the university administration. Despite these hurdles, to date each year has seen increased capacity for the Centre in terms of affiliated scientists, funding and staffing as well as output in terms of published reports, electronic resources and impacts on policy and practice. Areas of special research interest include: drug testing in the work-place, epidemiological monitoring, substance use and injury, pricing and taxation policies, privatization of liquor monopolies, polysubstance use, health determinants of indigenous peoples, street-involved youth and other vulnerable populations at risk of substance use problems. Further information about the Centre and its activities can be found on . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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50. Response to commentaries.
- Author
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Field, Matt and Kersbergen, Inge
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BIOLOGICAL models ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,DRUG addiction ,QUALITY assurance - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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