Old and high : a guide to understanding the neuroscience and psychotherapeutic treatment of baby-boom adults' substance use, abuse, and misuse / Robert Youdin.
- Youdin, Robert
- Date:
- [2019]
- Books
About this work
Description
"Despite the stereotype of older adults primarily abusing alcohol, clinical practice insights indicate that the baby-boom generation frequently abuses the same substances as younger adults--including alcohol, opioids, benzodiazepines/z-drugs, neurostimulants, cannabis, and tobacco/nicotine. Old and High exposes this hidden epidemic and emphasizes the importance of understanding psychotropic substance abuse as a community health problem. Further, the book identifies the unique cultural values, social values, and risks that baby-boom adults have with respect to substance abuse and misuse to give students and clinical professionals in psychology, social work, gerontology, nursing, and medicine a foundation for working with this population. Readers will, specifically, learn how to integrate current neuroscience findings with contemporary psychotherapy techniques and harm-reductive interventions to help older adults achieve successful recovery from substance abuse problems. Considering that we will likely observe an increase in rates of substance abuse as the baby-boom generation continues to age--and live longer than previous groups--there will be a major need to better understand the unique risk factors and treatment approaches when working with older adults."-- Provided by publisher.
Publication/Creation
Physical description
Contributors
Bibliographic information
Contents
Languages
Subjects
- Older peopleDrug useUnited States
- Older peopleAlcohol useUnited States
- Baby boom generationHealth aspectsUnited States
- Psychotropic drugsUnited States
- AlcoholismTreatmentUnited States
- NeurosciencesUnited States
- Substance-Related Disordersphysiopathology
- Substance-Related Disorderstherapy
- Aged
- Psychotherapy
- Brainphysiopathology
Where to find it
Location Status Medical CollectionWM270 2019Y67oOpen shelves
Permanent link
Identifiers
ISBN
- 9780190672898
- 0190672897