1st Edition

Psychodynamic Approaches for Treatment of Drug Abuse and Addiction Theory and Treatment

By David Potik Copyright 2021
208 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

208 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

208 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book provides clinicians and students with insights on the use of psychodynamic therapy to treat drug abuse and addiction, combining theory with clinical case material. The perspectives of analysts such as Abraham, Rado, Zimmel, Tibout, Wurmser, Khanzian, Krystal and McDougall are reviewed alongside original and more recent conceptualizations of drug addiction and recovery based on... Read more

Introduction

1. An historical overview of psychoanalytic perspectives on drug abuse and addiction – Part 1

2. An historical overview of psychoanalytic perspectives on drug abuse and addiction – Part 2

3. Drug addiction ≈ the paranoid-schizoid position

4. Recovery and reparation ≈ the depressive position

5. Lapses and relapses

6. Therapeutic issues: internal destructiveness, countertransference and projective identification

7. Methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) as transitional phenomena (David Potik, Miriam Adelson and Shaul Schreiber)

8. Towards independence: detoxification during opioid maintenance treatment

9. Drug abuse and addiction in the view of self psychology

10. The 12-step program

Biography

David Potik is a clinical criminologist at the Day-Hospital and at the Dr. Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson Clinic for Drug Abuse Research and Treatment, both within the division of psychiatry at the Tel-Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Israel. He also works as a psychotherapist in private practice and is an accredited Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) practitioner. He has published articles on psychoanalytic psychotherapy, psychopathology and drug addiction. 

"David Potik’s Psychodynamic Approaches for Treatment of Drug Abuse and Addiction is an excellent introduction to the psychoanalytic literature on addiction theory and treatment. His specific application of object relation’s theory to a broad range of treatment settings is an invaluable contribution that many will find enlightening as well as useful."
George Hagman, LCSW, former Clinical Director of the Montefiore Substance Abuse Treatment Program, NY