Tuesday, May 26, 2020

A Study On Substance Abuse - 1562 Words

When a client has a disorder, and goes to a therapist for help, would it make sense to help them using only one school of thought or many? In the past, and even some today, therapist were trained in one school of thought and so they only used techniques from that one school to treat their clients. Substance abuse does not just affect one category of people, and if we treat everyone as a 30 year old white upper class male/ female there are a lot of people we would be leaving out. Our country is rich in different cultures and ethnicities, with so many it is virtually impossible to treat them all with one set treatment method or technique. Some therapist realized a need for more diverse treatment methods and went on to get further training in other techniques, this led to what we now call eclectic and integrative psychotherapy. In these forms of therapy, the psychologist borrows from different approaches to therapy to better help a particular person. The integration of various schools o f psychotherapy has been in the making for several decades, the reason it took so long to be taken seriously is because of the competition between different schools. A good example of this is during Freudian times when there were meetings on psychoanalysis, during these meetings each therapist would claim that they had found the best treatment approach which caused arguments. These disagreements only multiplied once behaviorism was founded. One of the first attempts at combining techniques wasShow MoreRelatedThe Cost Of Substance Abuse In Canada Case Study966 Words   |  4 PagesThe cost of substance abuse in Canada is astronomical. According to the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse (CCSA), in 2002 alcohol accounted for about $14.6 billion and illegal drugs for about $8.2 billion in social cost (Single, Robertson, Rehm, Xie, 2002). 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