The 27 Year Longitudinal Panel Study of Drinking by Students in College, 1949-1976
Author | : Kaye Middleton Fillmore |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 658 |
Release | : 1979 |
Genre | : College students |
ISBN | : |
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Author | : Kaye Middleton Fillmore |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 658 |
Release | : 1979 |
Genre | : College students |
ISBN | : |
Author | : P. Clayton Rivers |
Publisher | : U of Nebraska Press |
Total Pages | : 370 |
Release | : 1987-01-01 |
Genre | : Psychology |
ISBN | : 9780803289253 |
Alcohol and drug abuse are among the gravest and most widespread problems clinical psychologists must treat. Though the problems seem perennial, diagnosis and treatment have been steadily refined, allowing professional psychologists to assess more variables and to offer more effective help. This volume surveys the latest advances in research and therapy and reconsiders standard treatment practices. The contributors to Alcohol and Addictive Behavior, all of them established professionals, focus on such key issues as the effect of addiction on the family, the influence of genetics, and the source of alcohol and drug craving. Much of what they report is based on new and ongoing research that should have considerable influence in the future treatment of alcohol and substance abusers. The contents include: ?What Do Behavioral Scientists Know?and What Can They Do?about Alcoholism? by Peter E. Nathan, Rutgers University; ?The Four Alcoholisms: A Developmental Account of the Etiological Process? by Robert A. Zucker, Michigan State University; ?Antecedents and Consequences of Drinking and Drinking Patterns in Women: Patterns from a U.S. National Survey? by Richard W. Wilsnack, University of North Dakota School of Medicine; ?Alcoholism: A Family Interaction Perspective? by Theodore Jacob, University of Pittsburgh, Biological Markers for Alcoholism: A Vulnerability Model Conceptualization? by Shirley Y. Hill, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine; and ?The Motivation to Use Drugs: A Psychobiological Analysis of Urges? by Timothy B. Baker, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Author | : H.M. Annis |
Publisher | : Springer Science & Business Media |
Total Pages | : 417 |
Release | : 2013-11-11 |
Genre | : Medical |
ISBN | : 1489916695 |
This is the tenth volume in the Research Advances series and the seventh published by Plenum Press. Volume 10 is another omnibus volume, providing specialized and advanced reviews in a number of areas related to the use of alcohol, illicit drugs, and tobacco. We include also a brief history of the Center for Alcohol Studies that gives Mark Keller's unique perspective on this noted institution. Two of the chapters are decidedly longer than the others-very long chapters have appeared occasionally in the past, and we think that it is one of the strengths of the series that we are able to accommodate such reviews. Again the editorial board has changed. After several years of service, Reginald G. Smart has stepped down. New to the board are Helen M. Annis, Michael S. Goodstadt, Lynn T. Kozlowski, and Evelyn R. Vingilis. This is likely to be the sole volume for which Goodstadt is on the board, since before completion of this volume he moved from the Addiction Research Foundation to the Center for Alcohol Studies, Rutgers University.
Author | : Bernard Segal |
Publisher | : Taylor & Francis |
Total Pages | : 160 |
Release | : 2022-05-29 |
Genre | : Psychology |
ISBN | : 1000595595 |
First published in 1987, Perspectives on Person-Environment Interaction and Drug-Taking Behavior provides a comprehensive overview of the interactionist approach from both a theoretical and applied perspective. Divided into five chapters, it deals with themes like psychosocial interactionism and substance use; social sanctions, self-referent responses, and the continuation of substance abuse; the interaction of child and environment in the early development of drug involvement; reconceptualization of person- environment interactions; and the disease theory of alcoholism from an interactionist perspective. This book is a must read for scholars and researchers of addiction studies, applied psychology and psychology in general.
Author | : George E. Vaillant |
Publisher | : Harvard University Press |
Total Pages | : 463 |
Release | : 2009-07-01 |
Genre | : Psychology |
ISBN | : 0674044568 |
When The Natural History of Alcoholism was first published in 1983, it was acclaimed in the press as the single most important contribution to the literature on alcoholism since the first edition of Alcoholic Anonymous’s Big Book. George Vaillant took on the crucial questions of whether alcoholism is a symptom or a disease, whether it is progressive, whether alcoholics differ from others before the onset of their alcoholism, and whether alcoholics can safely drink. Based on an evaluation of more than 600 individuals followed for over forty years, Vaillant’s monumental study offered new and authoritative answers to all of these questions. In this updated version of his classic book, Vaillant returns to the same subjects with the perspective gained from fifteen years of further follow-up. Alcoholics who had been studied to age 50 in the earlier book have now reached age 65 and beyond, and Vaillant reassesses what we know about alcoholism in light of both their experiences and the many new studies of the disease by other researchers. The result is a sharper focus on the nature and course of this devastating disorder as well as a sounder foundation for the assessment of various treatments.
Author | : Judith L. Rapoport |
Publisher | : American Psychiatric Pub |
Total Pages | : 438 |
Release | : 2008-11-01 |
Genre | : Medical |
ISBN | : 1585628301 |
Age at onset studies have been an important approach to understanding disease across all medical specialties. Over the last few decades, genetic research has led to the identification of unique genes and, in some cases, physiologically different disorders. These advances bring us closer to identifying genetic vulnerability and implementing prevention programs for psychopathology. Childhood Onset of "Adult" Psychopathology: Clinical and Research Advances provides an understanding of the childhood onsets of adult psychiatric disorders, including when and in what sequence psychiatric disorders begin in childhood, and how these disorders evolve over the life span. This book examines Studies on the growing volume of data on very early forms of depression, criminality, alcoholism, schizophrenia, and anxiety Genetics, evolution, and the significance of age at onset in terms of individual variability and the course of disease The biological manner in which early-onset disorders progress New insights into the disease etiology of schizophrenia and the neurodevelopmental hypothesis The long-debated subject of whether depressive disorder in preadolescent children is the same as depressive disorder in adults and studies of individuals at risk for disorders of anxiety and depression The implications for prevention of adult psychiatric disorders, alcoholism, and antisocial personality disorder Complete with extensive references and tables, this text provides practitioners with a better understanding of adult psychopathology and insight into early detection and prevention methods.
Author | : C. Janes |
Publisher | : Springer Science & Business Media |
Total Pages | : 366 |
Release | : 2012-12-06 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 9400937237 |
Over the past two decades increasing interest has emerged in the contribu tions that the social sciences might make to the epidemiological study of patterns of health and disease. Several reasons can be cited for this increasing interest. Primary among these has been the rise of the chronic, non-infectious diseases as important causes of morbidity and mortality within Western populations during the 20th century. Generally speaking, the chronic, non infectious diseases are strongly influenced by lifestyle variables, which are themselves strongly influenced by social and cultural forces. The under standing of the effects of the behavioral factors in, say, hypertension, thus requires an understanding of the social and cultural factors which encourage obesity, a sedentary lifestyle, non-compliance with anti-hypertensive medica tions (or other prescribed regimens), and stress. Equally, there is a growing awareness that considerations of human behavior and its social and cultural determinants are important for understanding the distribution and control of infectious diseases. Related to this expansion of epidemiologic interest into the behavioral realm 'has been the development of etiological models which focus on the psychological, biological and socio-cultural characteristics of hosts, rather than exclusive concern with exposure to a particular agent or even behavioral risk. Also during this period advances in statistical and computing techniques have made accessible the ready testing of multivariate causal models, and so have encouraged the measurement of the effects of social and cultural factors on disease occurrence.