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A01=Alex Copello
A01=Carol Atkinson
A01=Guillermina Natera
A01=Gwen Walley
A01=Ian Crundall
A01=Jazmin Mora
A01=Jim Orford
A01=Lorna Templeton
A01=Marcela Tiburcio
A01=Richard Velleman
Australian Interviews
Author_Alex Copello
Author_Carol Atkinson
Author_Guillermina Natera
Author_Gwen Walley
Author_Ian Crundall
Author_Jazmin Mora
Author_Jim Orford
Author_Lorna Templeton
Author_Marcela Tiburcio
Author_Richard Velleman
Category=JHBK
Category=JHMC
Category=JKSN2
Comprehensive Social Security System
Couple Marital Satisfaction
cross-cultural family studies
cultural differences substance use
Deteriorated Relationship
Drinking Problems
Drinking Relative
Drug Problems
Drug Taking
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Excessive Drinking
Family Members
family resilience alcohol
Finnish Wives
Hannah's Family
Household's Economic Circumstances
Husband's Drinking
Indigenous Australian Context
Informed Person
intervention prevention models
Mexican Wife
psychosocial impact addiction
qualitative coping strategies
Relative's Problem Drinking
Socio-cultural Groups
Sociocultural Group
South West England
SRT.
Stress Strain Coping Support Model
substance misuse research
UK Wide Survey
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415647038
  • Weight: 430g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Dec 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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What difference does culture make?

Coping with Alcohol and Drug Problems: The Experiences of Family Members in Three Contrasting Cultures aims to deepen and extend understanding of the experiences of family members trying to cope with the excessive drinking or drug taking of a relative.

Comprehensive and thoroughly up to date, this book draws on the results of the cross-cultural study of alcohol and drug problems in the family, and places these results within the broader context of the international literature on the subject. By investigating the similarities and differences in the experiences of family members in three parts of the world, the authors reveal results which have far-reaching implications for professional intervention and prevention. Subjects covered include:

  • models of understanding: how families continue to be pathologised and misunderstood.
  • how family members cope.
  • an integrated view of alcohol and drug problems in the family.
  • ways of empowering family members.

This book aims to demonstrate the possibility of a constructive alliance between professionals, substance misusing relatives, and the affected family members by thoroughly investigating the dilemmas that face family members and the lack of support they experience.

This fascinating insight into the impact of alcohol and drug problems on family members will be a valuable resource for all those who are interested in substance misuse in family and cultural contexts, and particularly those who are interested in the treatment of alcohol and other drug problems.

The authors are an international collaborating group from the following three centres: the Epidemiological and Psychosocial Research Directorate at the National Institute of Psychiatry, Ramón de la Fuente, Mexico City; members of the Alcohol, Drugs and the Family Research Group in England, based at the Universities of Birmingham and Bath and their associated National Health Service Mental Health Trusts; the Aboriginal Living with Alcohol Program of Territory Health Services, Northern Territory, Australia.

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