Open AccessBook
Motivational Interviewing: Preparing People to Change Addictive Behavior
William R. Miller,Stephen Rollnick +1 more
- 01 Jan 1991
4.7K
TL;DR: The second edition of the Motivational Interviewing (MI) has been published by as mentioned in this paper, which includes 25 nearly all-new chapters, including guidelines for using their approach with a variety of clinical populations and reflect on the process of learning MI.
read more
Abstract: Since the initial publication of this classic text, motivational interviewing (MI) has been used by countless clinicians in diverse settings. Theory and methods have evolved apace, reflecting new knowledge on the process of behavior change, a growing body of outcome research, and the development of new applications within and beyond the addictions field. Including 25 nearly all-new chapters, this revised and expanded second edition now brings MI practitioners and trainees fully up to date. William R. Miller and Stephen Rollnick explain how to work through ambivalence to facilitate change, present detailed guidelines for using their approach with a variety of clinical populations, and reflect on the process of learning MI. Chapters contributed by other leading experts then address such special topics as MI and the stages-of-change model; using the approach with groups, couples, and adolescents; and applications to general medical care, health promotion, and criminal justice settings.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Biomedical risk assessment as an aid for smoking cessation.
Raphaël Bize,Bernard Burnand,Yolanda Mueller,Myriam Rège-Walther,Jean-Yves Camain,Jacques Cornuz +5 more
TL;DR: Current evidence of lower quality does not however support the hypothesis that biomedical risk assessment increases smoking cessation in comparison with standard treatment.
Advising people to take more exercise is ineffective: a randomized controlled trial of physical activity promotion in primary care
TL;DR: If patients whose health may benefit from increased physical activity seek advice in primary care, 20-30 minutes of brief negotiation to increase physical activity is probably more effective than similar attempts to persuade or coerce.
212
Substance use reduction in the context of outpatient psychiatric treatment: a collaborative, motivational, harm reduction approach.
TL;DR: This model attempts to integrate clinical realities of mental health treatment with empirically-grounded strategies applicable to substance abuse problems.
204
Illness Management and Recovery: A Review of the Research
Kim T. Mueser,Patrick W. Corrigan,David W. Hilton,Beth Tanzman,Annette Schaub,Susan Gingerich,Susan M. Essock,Nicholas Tarrier,Bodie Morey,Suzanne Vogel-Scibilia,Marvin I. Herz +10 more
- 01 Jan 2004
TL;DR: Research on illness management for persons with severe mental illness indicates that psychoeducation improves people's knowledge of mental illness; that behavioral tailoring helps people take medication as prescribed; that relapse prevention programs reduce symptom relapses and rehospitalizations; and that coping skills training using cognitive-behavioral techniques reduces the severity and distress of persistent symptoms.
200
Motivation for Change: Implications for Substance Abuse Treatment
TL;DR: Motivation for change plays an important part in the process of recognizing the need for change, seeking treatment, and achieving successful sustained change as discussed by the authors, and the authors in this paper review how motivational readiness to change, as conceptualized within the transtheoretical model, contributes to the process for recovery.
199