Authors: Jo-ann Krestan
ISBN-13: 9780684846491, ISBN-10: 0684846497
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Date Published: March 2000
Edition: 1st Edition
Jo-Ann Krestan is a leading marriage and family therapist and addiction counselor who has appeared on such shows as Oprah and 20/20 and is co-author of The Responsibility Trap: A Blueprint for Treating the Alcoholic Family. Her other books include Singing at the Top of Our Lungs and Too Good for Her Own Good. She lives in Surry, Maine, and Castle Valley, Utah.
At last, a book that defines a new language for treating substance abuse in an increasingly culturally diverse population. Until now, therapists, counselors, and teachers who treat addiction within the context of the whole family have had to make do with outdated one-size-fits-all theories and treatment programs.
Bridges to Recovery is the first book to bring together experts from three major fields within psychotherapy -- family therapy, addiction counseling and multicultural treatment -- to provide a practical and flexible framework for working with families within their individual cultural contexts. Drawing upon case studies, clinical anecdotes and proven treatment methods, Bridges to Recovery provides practitioners with a unique insight into the individual cultural nuances that make addiction recovery a very personal journey.
Jo-Ann Krestan, co-author of the classic book The Responsibility Trap: A Blueprint for Treating the Alcoholic Family, and her contributors integrate the latest ideas and research to offer a foundation for addiction treatment that brings to the forefront the cultural thinking that affects alcohol and drug use/abuse among Native Americans, Jewish Americans, African Americans, West Indians, Asian Americans, Mexican Americans, Puerto Ricans and groups of European origin. This book will be an invaluable asset to teachers and students in clinical social work, psychology and substance abuse counseling programs, setting the standard for education and treatment at the beginning of the 21st century.
About the Contributors
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Jo-Ann Krestan
Part One Perspectives
1. Addiction, Power, and Powerlessness
Jo-Ann Krestan
2. Kaleidoscopes and Epic Tales: Diverse Narratives of Adult Children of Alcoholics
Laura Chakrin Cable
Part Two Ethnic Ecologies
3. Culturally Specific Addiction Recovery for Native Americans
Don Coyhis
4. Addiction Treatment for Jewish Americans and Their Families
Jeffrey Ellias-Frankel, Alan Oberman, and Kelly Ward
5. Addiction, African Americans, and a Christian Recovery Journey
Deniece J. Reid
6. Addiction Recovery Among West Indians
Amy Bibb and Georges J. Casimir
7. Treating Asian/Pacific American Addicts and Their Families
Peter Chang
8. Addiction Treatment for Mexican American Families
Moises Barón
9. Puerto Rican Families and Substance Abuse
Miguel Hernandez
10. Addiction and Groups of European Origin
Jacqueline Hudak
Index