HIT D&A-How I Think about Drugs and Alcohol Questionnaire, Manual and Packet of 20 Questionnaires - Alvaro Q. Barriga, John C. Gibbs, Granville Bud Potter, M. Konopisos, K.T. Barriga

HIT D&A-How I Think about Drugs and Alcohol Questionnaire, Manual and Packet of 20 Questionnaires

Media-Kombination
277 Seiten
2007
Research Press Inc.,U.S.
978-0-87822-599-6 (ISBN)
48,45 inkl. MwSt
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Grades 9-12. Based on the theoretical model of the How I Think (HIT) Questionnaire, this research-based, 54-item assessment tool measures adolescents' behaviors and attitudes related to drug use. The HIT - D&A requires only a fourth-grade reading level and can be completed by most adolescents in 5 to 10 minutes. It provides information on the type and degree of drug use, impact of drugs on the adolescent's life, normative levels of soft and hard drug use, abuse and dependence symptoms, and how adolescents rationalize the use of drugs through self-serving cognitive distortions such as self-centered, blaming others, minimizing/mislabeling, and assuming the worst. The How I Think about Drugs and Alcohol Questionnaire is accompanied by a 68-page manual that includes scoring and computation instructions and forms. The HIT - D&A is useful in assessment, treatment planning, tracking therapeutic progress, and individual- or program-level outcome evaluation.

The HIT-D&A Questionnaire can be used in a variety of situations that call for the assessment of adolescents' drug-related behaviors and/or attitudes. In certain situations, such as primary care settings or school counselor offices, the HIT-D&A is brief enough to function as a screener when the client and clinician wish to evaluate the possibility of a referral for drug treatment. In other situations, such as mental health clinics or drug treatment centers, the HIT-D&A is comprehensive and detailed enough to be used as an integral part of a full clinical evaluation of an adolescent's drug problem.

In addition to its utility as a clinical tool for assessment and outcomes evaluation, the HIT-D&A should prove to be a practical research instrument. The field of adolescent drug use desperately needs reliable and valid measures of key constructs in order to propel the field forward. With one brief measure, researchers can assess drug use as well as related symptoms and attitudes. For example, the HIT-D&A could be used to investigate the complicated relationships that likely exist between drug-related attitudes and behaviors. Attitudes that support drug use may someday provide predictive validity for the later development of drug problems before the onset of drug use has even occurred. Such attitudes may also someday help to predict drug use continuation, progression, desistance, quality of response to treatment, differential responses to different types of treatments, and likelihood of relapse after treatment. The HIT-D&A can further be used to evaluate developmental claims regarding the progression of use from soft to hard drugs, or from experimentation to abuse and then dependence. Such a developmental progression could even be investigated with regard to the role of attitudes in shaping different developmental trajectories.

Dr Alvaro Q. Barriga, PhD (The Ohio State University, 1996), is a psychologist at the Center for Traumatic Stress in Children and Adolescents within the Psychiatry Department of Allegheny General Hospital in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. At the center, Dr. Barriga provides trauma focused cognitive-behavioral therapy to youth and their families and provides instruction and supervision to interns and residents. Dr. Barriga’s research has focused primarily on the assessment, conceptualization, and treatment of problematic cognitions and behaviors. He has extensive clinical experience within outpatient, inpatient, and residential settings and has consulted with a variety of legal, educational, and mental health agencies. Dr John C. Gibbs, PhD (Harvard University, 1972), is a professor of developmental psychology at The Ohio State University, USA. He has been a member of the State of Ohio Governor's Council on Juvenile Justice and is a faculty associate of The Ohio State University Criminal Justice Research Center. His work has focused on developmental theory, assessment of social cognition and moral judgment development, and interventions with conduct-disordered adolescents. A coauthor on the second edition of Aggression Replacement Training (Research Press, 1998), he is first author of The EQUIP Program (1995) and coauthor of The EQUIP Program Implementation Guide (2001). His other books include EQUIP for Educators (Research Press, 2005), Moral Development and Reality: Beyond the Theories of Kohlber, Hoffman, and Haidt (3rd ed.; Oxford University Press, in press) and Moral Maturity: Measuring the Development of Sociomoral Reflection (Erlbaum/Taylor & Francis, 1992). Granville Bud Potter, M.Ed. (Bowling Green State University, 1975) is currently the executive director of the Franklin County (Ohio) Community-Based Correction Facility. While serving in this capacity, he has successfully adapted the EQUIP program to serve adult offenders. Bud is also self- employed as a consultant to correctional and educational agencies. He retired from the Ohio Department of Youth Services in 1998 after 30 years working within institutions and parole divisions. As a consultant, he has worked with agencies in 21 of the United States and 2 states in Australia. He is the past president of the Ohio Correctional and Court Services Association. Much of his professional experience has involved the use of a peer-group modality.

Erscheint lt. Verlag 30.11.2007
Verlagsort IL
Sprache englisch
Maße 216 x 279 mm
Gewicht 333 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Psychologie Entwicklungspsychologie
Medizin / Pharmazie Medizinische Fachgebiete Suchtkrankheiten
Sozialwissenschaften Pädagogik Didaktik
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
ISBN-10 0-87822-599-4 / 0878225994
ISBN-13 978-0-87822-599-6 / 9780878225996
Zustand Neuware
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