1st Edition
Stress, Trauma and Substance Use
The editors of Stress, Trauma, and Substance Use have gathered a collection of innovative chapters written by cutting edge researchers that depict both the breadth of the relationships between stress, trauma, and substance use, as well as how closely these phenomena are all too often linked.
Individually, the chapters in this volume present innovative conceptual models, original research findings, and recommendations to service providers that are applicable to a diverse body of individuals affected by a wide variety of stressful and/or traumatic experiences, such as HIV/AIDS, incarceration, homelessness, sexual assault, and other forms of trauma and violence in addition to substance use. Taken as a whole, the content of this text provides a window into the true nature of the multi-layered and interconnected relationship between stress, trauma, and substance use. The untangling of these relationships holds great promise for continued research that develops a better understanding of these phenomena and ultimately improves the lives of individuals touched by these experiences.
This book was previously published as a special issue of Stress, Trauma, and Crisis: An International Journal.
1. Stress, Trauma, and Substance Use: An Overview
Brian E. Bride (University of Georgia) and Samuel A. MacMaster (University of Tennessee)
2. An Integrated Sensory-Linguistic Approach for Drug Addiction: A Synthesis of the Literature and New Directions for Treatment Research
Holly C. Matto (University at Albany, State University of New York)
3. Young African-American Male Suicide Prevention and Spirituality
Gregory Washington and Katheryn Teague (University of Tennessee)
4. Acculturative Stress, Violence, and Resilience in the Lives of Mexican-American Youth
Lori K. Holleran and Soyon Jung (University of Texas at Austin)
5. The Prevalence of HIV Among Substance-Abusing African-American Women: A Qualitative Investigation
Jenny L. Jones (University of Tennessee)
6. Factors Associated with Trauma Symptoms among Runaway/Homeless Adolescents
Sanna J. Thompson (University of Texas at Austin)
7. "I Came to Prison to Do My Time – Not to Get Raped": Coping Within the Institutional Setting
Sheryl Pimlott Kubiak, Julie Hanna, and Marianne Balton (Wayne State University)
8. Integrating Research and Practice: A Collaborative Model for Addressing Trauma and Addiction
Shelly A. Weichelt, Wendy Lutz, Nancy J. Smyth, and Charles, Syms (University at Buffalo, State University of New York)
9. Subthreshold PTSD: A Comparison of Alcohol, Depression, and Health Problems in Canadian Peacekeepers with Different Levels of Traumatic Stress
Jeffrey S. Yarvis, Patrick S. Bordnick, Christina A. Spivey (University of Georgia), and David Pedlar(Veteran Affairs Canada )
Biography
Brian E Bride, Samuel A MacMaster