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Responding to Drinking Problems

Research output: Book/Report/ProceedingsBook

Published

Standard

Responding to Drinking Problems. / Shaw, Stan; Cartwright, Alan; Terry, Spratley et al.
London: Routledge, 1978. 269 p.

Research output: Book/Report/ProceedingsBook

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Shaw S, Cartwright A, Terry S, Harwin J. Responding to Drinking Problems. London: Routledge, 1978. 269 p.

Author

Shaw, Stan ; Cartwright, Alan ; Terry, Spratley et al. / Responding to Drinking Problems. London : Routledge, 1978. 269 p.

Bibtex

@book{7b64d6e7061f480fb958dfabe5b96bfb,
title = "Responding to Drinking Problems",
abstract = "In the 1970s family doctors, social workers, researchers and administrators had been aware of the inadequacy of the response to drinking problems for some time. However, there had been no systematic examination of why such agents felt negatively about drinkers and disinclined to respond to them. Originally published in 1978, this book develops a radical new perspective on the prevalence and causes of drinking problems, combining reviews of historical and contemporary literature with the authors{\textquoteright} own research studies. This perspective is then linked to the need for an integrated response from both medical and social services, with a particular accent on the need for a community response. By focusing on the relationship between helper and helped a solution is sought to the question which has troubled the field for many years: why are agents like family doctors and social workers so inadequate in recognising and responding to people with drinking problems? The crucial aspects within the therapeutic relationship are pinpointed and experimental studies are described which show how training, casework, supervision and the redeployment of expertise can help improve recognition rates and responses to individual drinkers. This book thus expresses the need for major changes both in our attitudes and understanding of people with drinking problems and the difficulties of agents who try to help them. It should still be of historical interest to social scientists and those involved in helping people with drinking problems.",
author = "Stan Shaw and Alan Cartwright and Spratley Terry and Judith Harwin",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 1978 Stan Shaw, Alan Cartwright, Terry Spratley and Judith Harwin. All rights reserved.",
year = "1978",
month = dec,
day = "31",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781032611488",
publisher = "Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Responding to Drinking Problems

AU - Shaw, Stan

AU - Cartwright, Alan

AU - Terry, Spratley

AU - Harwin, Judith

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 1978 Stan Shaw, Alan Cartwright, Terry Spratley and Judith Harwin. All rights reserved.

PY - 1978/12/31

Y1 - 1978/12/31

N2 - In the 1970s family doctors, social workers, researchers and administrators had been aware of the inadequacy of the response to drinking problems for some time. However, there had been no systematic examination of why such agents felt negatively about drinkers and disinclined to respond to them. Originally published in 1978, this book develops a radical new perspective on the prevalence and causes of drinking problems, combining reviews of historical and contemporary literature with the authors’ own research studies. This perspective is then linked to the need for an integrated response from both medical and social services, with a particular accent on the need for a community response. By focusing on the relationship between helper and helped a solution is sought to the question which has troubled the field for many years: why are agents like family doctors and social workers so inadequate in recognising and responding to people with drinking problems? The crucial aspects within the therapeutic relationship are pinpointed and experimental studies are described which show how training, casework, supervision and the redeployment of expertise can help improve recognition rates and responses to individual drinkers. This book thus expresses the need for major changes both in our attitudes and understanding of people with drinking problems and the difficulties of agents who try to help them. It should still be of historical interest to social scientists and those involved in helping people with drinking problems.

AB - In the 1970s family doctors, social workers, researchers and administrators had been aware of the inadequacy of the response to drinking problems for some time. However, there had been no systematic examination of why such agents felt negatively about drinkers and disinclined to respond to them. Originally published in 1978, this book develops a radical new perspective on the prevalence and causes of drinking problems, combining reviews of historical and contemporary literature with the authors’ own research studies. This perspective is then linked to the need for an integrated response from both medical and social services, with a particular accent on the need for a community response. By focusing on the relationship between helper and helped a solution is sought to the question which has troubled the field for many years: why are agents like family doctors and social workers so inadequate in recognising and responding to people with drinking problems? The crucial aspects within the therapeutic relationship are pinpointed and experimental studies are described which show how training, casework, supervision and the redeployment of expertise can help improve recognition rates and responses to individual drinkers. This book thus expresses the need for major changes both in our attitudes and understanding of people with drinking problems and the difficulties of agents who try to help them. It should still be of historical interest to social scientists and those involved in helping people with drinking problems.

M3 - Book

AN - SCOPUS:85179282884

SN - 9781032611488

BT - Responding to Drinking Problems

PB - Routledge

CY - London

ER -