An Integrated Treatment Model for Dual Diagnosis of Psychosis and Addiction
- 1 October 1989
- journal article
- Published by American Psychiatric Association Publishing in Psychiatric Services
- Vol. 40 (10) , 1031-1036
- https://doi.org/10.1176/ps.40.10.1031
Abstract
A model that integrates the treatment of patients with a dual diagnosis of psychosis and addiction has been developed on a general hospital psychiatric unit. The model emphasizes the parallels between the standard biopsychosocial illness-and-rehabilitation model for treatment of serious psychiatric disorders and the 12-step disease-and-recovery model of Alcoholics Anonymous for treatment of addiction. Dual-diagnosis patients are viewed as having two primary, chronic, biologic mental illnesses, each requiring specific treatment to stabilize acute symptoms and engage the patient in a recovery process. An integrated treatment program is described, as are the steps taken to alleviate psychiatric clinicians' concerns about patient involvement in AA and addiction clinicians' discomfort with patients' use of medication.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Alcohol Use and Abuse in SchizophreniaJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 1989
- Desipramine Facilitation of Initial Cocaine AbstinenceArchives of General Psychiatry, 1989
- Substance Abuse among General Psychiatric Patients: Place of Presentation, Diagnosis, and TreatmentThe American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 1988
- The Vermont longitudinal study of persons with severe mental illness, II: Long-term outcome of subjects who retrospectively met DSM-III criteria for schizophreniaAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1987
- Is Alcoholism Treatment Effective?Science, 1987
- The context of care for the chronic mental patient with substance abuse problemsPsychiatric Quarterly, 1986
- Substance Abuse in Psychiatric PatientsPublished by Springer Nature ,1985
- Criteria for the Differentiation of Success and Failure in Alcoholism Treatment OutcomePsychological Reports, 1976