Studyspark Study Document

Substance Abuse Counseling Diagnosis Essay

Pages:3 (954 words)

Sources:3

Subject:Health

Topic:Substance Abuse

Document Type:Essay

Document:#31331017


Part 1: Treatment Planning and Individual Treatment

Assessment Process

Assessing for substance abuse can be tricky, given the client’s potential for denial, their perception of social stigma related to substance abuse, and even the therapist’s own biases. Therefore, structured interviews and collateral interviews offer “a more complete picture of both the user and the impact they are having on others in their environment,” (Chapter 5, Slide 4). A diagnostic interview will yield information pertinent to a DSM diagnosis.

Milo clearly has a history of substance use behaviors that make this case easier to diagnose. The DSM-IV offers clear guidelines for diagnosis. Diagnostic criteria for substance abuse include a “maladaptive pattern” over a twelve-month period including recurrent situations that lead to failure to fulfill obligations at school, work, or home, and physically hazardous situations. Milo’s case study reveals hazardous situations (blackouts while driving), and the building up of tolerance to alcohol, as well as withdrawal symptoms. Milo also has comorbidity with social anxiety, one of the commonly related problems linked with substance abuse.

Ethical and Legal Considerations

Milo’s case should be treated with sensitivity and the same ethical considerations of any other client, meaning that confidentiality should me maintained. The therapist should not, for example, divulge information about Milo’s history of driving while intoxicated. Although he did hit an animal, Milo did not directly harm a human being and therefore there is no reason to divulge this information. Additional screenings and assessments might also help address any underlying or comorbid issues such as depression. Finally, the therapist may need to work with other healthcare workers to address Milo’s tendency to have seizures.

Evidence-Based Treatment Techniques

There are a number of different evidence-based treatment techniques useful for substance abuse. However, systematic reviews show that there is no one technique that is necessarily more efficacious than others, and each client may respond differently to different techniques (Waldron & Turner, 2008, p. 238). Individual and group therapies may be indicated in Milo’s case. Presenting problems are clearly linked to both social anxiety and substance abuse. The client is aware of the problem, and having experienced several frightening incidences lately is in a position of readiness to change. Current symptoms include the inability to stop drinking due to withdrawal symptoms like delirium tremens and even seizures.

The short-term goals for Milo’s treatment should include abstinence and commitment to therapy. Because Milo’s withdrawal symptoms are severe, short-term inpatient treatment is recommended. An in-patient setting may help Milo withdraw in a controlled manner, making it also less likely for a relapse. Milo may also be eligible to receive pharmacological interventions like Antabuse or Campral (Rose, 2017, Slide 13). Also, Milo would benefit from a thirty-day program because it would help inculcate some new coping habits that the client can transfer to his daily life as an out patient. Long term goals for Milo include abstinence but also regular counseling sessions to help manage the client’s stress and help him develop better coping mechanisms and resilience. Mindfulness techniques are strongly recommended as long-term solutions that will help Milo achieve overall objectives. Outcome criteria will be linked not just to Milo’s term of abstinence but also to his performance in motivational interviews, which should allow the client to develop desired cognitive and behavioral changes that will prevent relapse. Alternatively, Milo might decide that he eventually would like to envision himself being able to drink in a healthy manner, which could be a feasible goal within a harm reduction framework (Rose, 2017, Slide 14). Depending on Milo’s insurance and what his family can afford, the methods of service delivery will vary, but all should be solution-focused and as short-term as possible.

References

Rose, S. (2017). Notes on Chapter 5: Assessment and Diagnosis

Waldron, H.B. & Turner, C.W. (2008). Evidence-based psychosocial treatments for adolescent substance abuse. Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology 37(1): 238-261.

Part 2: Article Critique

Gonzales, R., Anglin, M., Beattie, R., Ong, C., & Glik, D. C. (2012). Understanding recovery barriers: Youth perceptions about substance use relapse. American Journal Of Health Behavior, 36(5), 602-614. doi:10.5993/AJHB.36.5.3

Introduction and Article Summary

In “Understanding Recovery Barriers,” Gonzales, Anglin, Beattie, et al (2012) explore ways young people (under age 25) conceptualize the…


Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Substance Abuse Among Licensed Counselors

Pages: 10 (3892 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Sports - Drugs Document: #82037251

However, a different kind of problem may arise, when the counselor himself was a user and an addict, and has recovered fully from his addictions, to move on to become a legal counselor of others like him. (NIDA, Introduction and overview) Take for example, the case of when a drug abuse and substance abuse counselor was among the fifteen people who were arrested recently in Harlem. The police charged this

Studyspark Study Document

Substance Abuse Disorder That Can Mimic a

Pages: 3 (1422 words) Sources: 3 Subject: Sports - Drugs Document: #13239881

substance abuse disorder that can mimic a mental health or medical diagnosis. -Addictions or substance abuse counseling Brooks, AJ & Penn, PE (2003) Comparing Treatments for Dual Diagnosis: Twelve-Step and Self-Management and Recovery Training THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF DRUG AND ALCOHOL ABUSE, 29, 359 -- 383 Brooks and Penn (2003) compared the effectiveness of the 12-step approach with the cognitive-behavioral (Self-Management and Recovery Training [SMART]) approach for people with a dual

Studyspark Study Document

Substance Abuse and Homeless Youth

Pages: 20 (6346 words) Sources: 15 Subject: Sports - Drugs Document: #86736183

For some, there will be a denial and minimization of the substance habit as being inconsequential, purely recreational or extremely intermittent. This response is akin to the young adult asserting that there is no problem. For other homeless youths, their drug or alcohol habit maybe viewed as a form of survival: these drugs help these teenagers bear life on the street. In that sense the substance is attributed as

Studyspark Study Document

Substance Abuse in Young Adults:

Pages: 5 (1450 words) Sources: 5 Subject: Sports - Drugs Document: #29190312

801). According to Green (2006), "Research on how gender influences substance use and substance-abuse-related problems has established clear differences between women and men in several important areas. Women typically consume less alcohol than men when they drink, drink alcohol less frequently, and are less likely to develop alcohol-related problems than men. Similarly, women are less likely than men to use illicit drugs and to develop drug-related problems" (p. 55). Relationship

Studyspark Study Document

Substance Abuse Clients and the

Pages: 4 (1519 words) Sources: 4 Subject: Sports - Drugs Document: #28147421

This is also a condition when a person does not think beyond what is observed in the surroundings. So children should be given exercise to create new thoughts which are devoid of substances in their surrounding or mentality. The most effective method of cognitive approach is to teach recovery techniques to a client that assist to overcome the condition, rather than find methods to change the mentality of a

Studyspark Study Document

Substance Abuse and Trauma

Pages: 7 (2001 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Psychology Document: #25017427

Substance Abuse Treatment as it Is Related to Trauma Research indicates that there is a strong correlation between people who have experienced trauma (whether in childhood or in adulthood) and substance abuse or dependency. Because patients who suffer from substance abuse are also highly likely to have experienced trauma in their lives, a trauma-focused care approach can be the best method of treating substance abuse patients because it emphasizes the underlying

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".