Doing Time or Doing Change? Collaborating for Accountable Treatment and Recovery
Keynote or Breakout
Description
To achieve the goals of increased public safety, decreased legal recidivism and re-entry, participants need to be engaged in a self-change, accountable treatment process. In the past, helping people change has too often depended on seeing resistance as negative, client pathology, “breaking through denial” and strategies that have disempowered and disrespected people. Individualized treatment using the concepts and constructs of the American Society of Addiction Medicine’s (ASAM) Criteria and motivational interviewing and other evidence-based practices can help engage participants in lasting change.
This presentation will discuss how judges, court teams, treatment providers and all stakeholders can work together to move people beyond compliance with mandated treatment to engage participants in responsible, accountable change and recovery.
Objectives
Participants will
Identify how to more purposefully join with participants to facilitate action/change.
Discuss how to use The ASAM Criteria and Evidence-Based Practices to engage hard-to-reach people as an active participant in an accountable service plan.
Apply the ASAM Criteria and stages of change work to increase accountability and lasting change.