Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 192
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-0-7425-6137-3 • Hardback • September 2008 • $75.00 • (£58.00)
978-0-7425-6551-7 • eBook • September 2008 • $71.00 • (£55.00)
Edward J. Khantzian, MD, is clinical professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and associate chief of psychiatry at Tewksbury Hospital, Tewksbury, MA. Mark J. Albanese, MD, is director of Addictions Treatment Services at Cambridge Health Alliance and assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.
Chapter 1 Foreword
Chapter 2 Why Self Medication?
Chapter 3 Addiction: Disease or Disorder
Chapter 4 The Self-Medication Hypothesis and Addiction as a Problem in Self-Regulation
Chapter 5 Self-Medication Hypothesis Research
Chapter 6 Contexts and Models for Understanding Addiction—A Brief Overview
Chapter 7 Suffering and Self-Medication
Chapter 8 Self-Medication, Psychiatric Disorders, and Emotional Pain
Chapter 9 Trauma and the Self-Medication Hypothesis
Chapter 10 Addiction and the Perpetuation of Suffering
Chapter 11 Nicotine, Marijuana and the Self-Medication Hypothesis
Chapter 12 Gambling and Other Behavioral Disorders
Chapter 13 The Neurobiology of Addictions
Chapter 14 How the Self-Medication Hypothesis Can Guide Treatment and Recovery
Chapter 15 Conclusion
Chapter 16 Afterword
Doctors Khantzian and Albanese wrote this book directly from their experience with patients, as well as their close involvement with vast research. This blessedly brief and un-confusing volume, a tour de force that is original, useful, and wise. These two doctors, who have given their professional lives to understanding and helping those who are affected by addictions, now give to the world a consummate gift: what they know. Combining knowledge with love, the authors have moved the dialogue on addictions to an entirely new level...
— Edward Hallowell, MD, Harvard Medical School faculty, retired, and New York Times bestselling author of Driven to Distraction
Understanding Addiction as Self Medication provides a clear explanation of the reasons behind many addictions, emphasizing the pain experienced by many addicted people. This is an important and readable book that provides useful insights to professionals, families, and friends, as well as individuals suffering with addictions....
— Kathleen T. Brady, MD, PhD
Recommended.....
— W. Feigelman
Understanding Addiction as Self-Medication is a worthwhile addition to the reading lists of counselors at all levels of experience....Understanding Addiction as Self-Medication pulls together a credible, non-judgmental theory of addiction.....
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This book clearly explains the self-medication hypothesis, updates and modernizes it, and provides very useful insights and tools for clinicians, patients, and their families....What makes this a special book is the skill, understanding, and attitudes ofthese very gifted, experienced, and creative therapists.... The writing is clear, enjoyable and a fast read. Moreover, the book is written at a level that can be easily comprehended by sophisticated patients, their families, and workers in allied fields....
— Richard Frances, MD