Case Studies in the Family Treatment of Drug Abuse |
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Authors: | ROBERT J. NOONE M.S.W. ROBERT L. REDDIG M.A. |
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Affiliation: | Comprehensive Drug Abuse Program, Family Service and Mental Health Center, Oak Park, Illinois. |
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Abstract: | This article, with case illustrations, attempts to demonstrate that drug-abuse behavior can be understood more clearly in the light of family loyalties and unresolved family crises than from the perspective that drug abusers are social deviates.1 Drug abuse is viewed as symptomatic, as a signal that both drug abuser and his or her family are having difficulty in getting past a particular stage in the natural unfolding life cycle of a family. Treatment of drug abuse is seen primarily as helping the family to become "unstuck," thereby freeing the individual's and family's energy for the task of self-development and growth rather than expending it to maintain rigid patterns of interaction in an attempt to prevent change. |
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