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Review
. 2004 Nov:99 Suppl 2:76-92.
doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2004.00856.x.

Family-based therapies for adolescent alcohol and drug use: research contributions and future research needs

Affiliations
Review

Family-based therapies for adolescent alcohol and drug use: research contributions and future research needs

Howard A Liddle. Addiction. 2004 Nov.

Abstract

Objective: To characterize the developmental status of the family-based adolescent alcohol and drug treatment specialty by identifying and discussing research and clinical advances.

Method: Selective and interpretative literature review and analysis.

Study selection: Controlled trials and mechanisms of change studies of family-based treatments for adolescent alcohol and drug misuse.

Results: Clinical innovations of family-based treatments include development of detailed therapy, training/supervision, and adherence manuals. Different family-based treatments have been tested with success in controlled trials and process studies. Different versions of the same approach might vary on parameters such as treatment dose, setting, and client characteristics. Research advances include findings that engagement and retention rates for family-based treatments are superior to standard treatment engagement/retention methods. Also, in clinical trials in which they are compared with alternative interventions, in the majority of studies, family-based treatments produce superior and stable outcomes with significant decreases on target symptoms of alcohol and drug use, and related problems such as delinquency, school and family problems, and affiliation with substance abusing peers. Mechanisms of change studies support the theory basis of family-based treatments. For instance, improvements in family interaction patterns coincide with decreases in core target alcohol and drug misuse symptoms.

Conclusions: Once in the shadows of the adult substance abuse field, the adolescent substance abuse specialty has become a unique, clinically creative, and empirically-based area. Research and clinical advances of family-based treatments have implications for non-family-based interventions in the adolescent substance misuse treatment specialty.

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