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Goal setting and monitoring with alcohol and other drug use disorders: Principles and practices.

Magill M, Martino S, Wampold BE. Goal setting and monitoring with alcohol and other drug use disorders: Principles and practices. Journal of substance abuse treatment. 2022 Jan 1; 132:108650.

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Abstract:

INTRODUCTION: This work builds on a small body of literature that explores core processes in psychotherapy, behavior change, and evidence-based alcohol or other drug (AOD) therapies. Here, this paper discusses two separate but dependent processes. The research team defines goal setting and goal monitoring as collaborative processes where clinicians and clients identify and formulate therapeutic goals; actionable objectives; and revisit, measure, and renegotiate these plans via a standardized procedure over time. METHOD: Study methods included a literature review and qualitative content analysis to derive a set of principles and practices of goal setting and monitoring. The research team used source documents (i.e., literature reviews, therapy manuals, and government-issued practice guidelines) and videos (i.e., therapy demonstration videos), and we performed analyses in NVIVO. RESULTS: The study identified ten principles and 32 practices. The principles suggest that goal setting and monitoring can be characterized as a collaborative, explicit, and standardized approach to engaging in goal-directed therapeutic work. The term goal-directed therapeutic work connotes a shift toward a more accountable frame for care than has been previously emphasized in the literature. The identified practices were organized into five sub-themes related to goal setting (10 practices), goal monitoring (10 practices), as well as practices specific to mechanisms of goal pursuit and behavior change. These practices involved ways to attend to client self-determination (4 practices), motivation (4 practices), and self-efficacy (4 practices). CONCLUSIONS: Goal setting and monitoring are a collaborative means of mapping and tracking a course of mutually accountable treatment. The current work is a novel resource for trainees, clinicians, and clinical supervisors interested in care based on evidence-based principles and practices of AOD and other behavior change therapies.





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