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Journal Article

Citation

Fals‐Stewart W, Lam WKK, Kelley ML. J. Fam. Ther. 2009; 31(2): 115-125.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1467-6427.2009.00458.x

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Among the various types of partner- and family-involved interventions used to treat adults with substance use disorders, Behavioural Couples Therapy (BCT) has garnered the strongest empirical support for its efficacy. During the past thirty years, multiple studies have consistently found married or cohabiting substance-abusing patients who engage in BCT, compared to traditional individual-based counselling or partner-involved attention control treatments, report significantly greater (1) reductions in substance use, (2) levels of relationship satisfaction, and (3) greater improvements in other areas of relationship and family adjustment (e.g. reductions in partner violence, improvements in custodial children's adjustment). In addition to discussing the theoretical rationale for BCT as a treatment of substance abuse, this article describes specific therapeutic techniques used as part of this intervention and summarizes the relevant evaluative empirical literature.

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