What does recovery mean to you? Lessons from the recovery experience for research and practice.

Recovery from alcoholism and addiction is a ubiquitous concept but remains poorly understood and ill defined, hindering the development of assessment tools necessary to evaluate treatment effectiveness. This study examines recovery definitions and experiences among persons who self-identify as “in recovery.”

Two questions are addressed:

  1. Does recovery require total abstinence from all drugs and alcohol?
  2. Is recovery defined solely in terms of substance use or does it extend to other areas of functioning as well?

Inner-city residents with resolved dependence to crack or heroin were interviewed yearly three times (N = 289).

Most defined recovery as total abstinence.

However, recovery goes well beyond abstinence;

  • it is experienced as a bountiful “new life,”
  • an ongoing process of growth,
  • self-change, and
  • reclaiming the self.

Implications for clinical and assessment practice are discussed, including the need to effect paradigmatic shifts from pathology to wellness and from acute to continuing models.

Research; Alexandre B. Laudet. What does recovery mean to you? Lessons from the recovery experience for research and practice. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment. Volume 33, Issue 3, October 2007, Pages 243-256

Related Reading:

The Craft of Research, Third Edition (Chicago Guides to Writing, Editing, and Publishing)
Addiction and Grace: Love and Spirituality in the Healing of Addictions (Plus)
Beyond the Influence: Understanding and Defeating Alcoholism
Hope After Betrayal: Healing When Sexual Addiction Invades Your Marriage
Essentials of Nursing Research: Appraising Evidence for Nursing Practice, North American Edition (Essentials of Nursing Research (Polit))
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