Characteristics of an Effective Substance Use Disorder Counselor
Categories:
Department of Psychiatry,
Best Practices in Schizophrenia Treatment (BeST) Center,
Department of Psychiatry,
Department of Psychiatry,
Best Practices in Schizophrenia Treatment (BeST) Center,
FEP Project ECHO,
Department of Psychiatry,
Project ECHO,
Department of Psychiatry,
Best Practices in Schizophrenia Treatment (BeST) Center,
FEP Project ECHO,
Substance Use | Tags:
accurate empathy,
active treatments,
affirmations,
behaviors,
case managers,
CBT,
client abstinence,
clinical beliefs,
clinical outcomes,
clinician adherence,
clinicians in recovery,
cognitive behavioral therapy,
collaboration,
common factors theory,
congruence,
corrective experience,
counselor characteristics,
demographic matching,
diagnosis,
dialectical behavior therapy,
drug treatment,
empathy,
employment specialists,
FEP,
first episode psychosis,
genuineness,
humanistic,
insight,
interventions,
lack of empathy,
MET,
meta-analysis,
MITI,
modality,
motivational enhancement therapy,
motivational interviewing,
motivational interviewing integrity code,
outcome,
outpatient,
peer support specialist,
philosophical orientation,
poorer SUD outcomes,
positive regard,
process,
professional characteristics,
psychologist,
psychosis,
psychotherapy,
racial identity,
reflections,
rituals,
Russell,
Russell Spieth,
satisfaction,
schizophrenia,
schizophrenia spectrum disorder,
Spieth,
substance abuse,
substance misuse,
substance use disorder,
substance use disorder treatment,
substances,
SUD,
SUD counseling,
SUD outcomes,
treatment,
treatment factors,
treatment fidelity,
treatment integrity,
treatment modality,
treatment retention,
TSF,
twelve-step facilitation
The characteristics of being an effective substance use disorder counselor (SUD) are discussed by Dr. Russell Spieth.