3 research outputs found

    Contextual Influences on a Coping Skills Intervention for Adolescents in Substance Use Recovery

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    Co-occurring disorders of substance use and mental health conditions occur in about 75% of adolescents, with depression ranked as the second most common co-occurring disorder, in 20-30% of adolescents (Hersh et al., 2014; Shrier et al., 2003). Contextual factors (i.e. parental substance use and DCF involvement) put adolescents at increased risk of substance use initiation and co-morbid depression (Clark et al., 2005; Walden et al., 2007). Results from the current literature are undetermined on how to best address co-occurring substance use disorders (SUD) and mental health diagnoses in adolescents. Researchers sought to do this in the current study through a mindfulness-based coping skills intervention, with a sample that included 57 participants, 27 in a recovery high school (RHS), and 29 non-treated comparison participants. The RHS participants engaged in a six-week mindfulness-based coping skills intervention aimed at reducing depression symptomology and emotion dysregulation. Assessments were completed at weeks one and six for RHS participants and at a single assessment time for the non-treated comparison participants. Results showed reduced depression symptomology for the sample as a whole for those indicating parental substance use and DCF involvement. RHS participants indicated high levels of depression above the clinical cut off compared to the non-treated comparison group at the initial assessment and following the six-week intervention. However, RHS participants demonstrated significantly reduced depression symptomology following the six-week mindfulness-based intervention. The current study has treatment implications for reducing depression symptomology via mindfulness-based interventions for youth in early SUD recovery who indicate parental substance use and DCF involvement

    Supplemental Material - Trends and Barriers of Medication Treatment for Opioid Use Disorders: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

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    Supplemental Material for Trends and Barriers of Medication Treatment for Opioid Use Disorders: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis by Morica Hutchison, Beth S. Russell, Abigail Leander, Nathaniel Rickles, Derek Aguiar, Xiaomei S. Cong, Ofer Harel, and Adrian V. Hernandez in Journal of Drug Issues</p
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