Titre : | Drug and Alcohol Review, Vol.33, n°6 - November 2014 |
Type de document : | Bulletin : Périodique |
Paru le : | 01/11/2014 |
Année de publication : | 2014 |
Langues: | Anglais |
Note de contenu : |
CONTENTS:
- Celebrating Robin Room [Editorial]. Ritter A., Stenius K., p. 575-576. - Reflections on the enduring value of critical scholarship. Moore D., p. 577-580. - The equal right to drink. Schmidt L.A., p. 581-587. - Socioeconomic differences in alcohol-related risk-taking behaviours. Livingston M., p. 588-595. - Reporting the characteristics of the policy context for population-level alcohol interventions: A proposed ‘Transparent Reporting of Alcohol Intervention ContExts’ (TRAICE) checklist. Holmes J., Meier P.S., Booth A., Brennan A., p. 596-603. - Implications of enrolment eligibility criteria in alcohol treatment outcome research: Generalisability and potential bias in 1-and 6-year outcomes. Storbjork J., p. 604-611. - Robin Room and cannabis policy: Dangerous comparisons. Hall W., p. 612-616. - Fostering and framing international social research on alcohol and other drugs: A tribute to Robin Room. Giesbrecht N., Rosenqvist P., p. 617-624. - Solving the problem of non-attendance in substance abuse services. Milward J., Lynskey M., Strang J., p. 625-636. - Is there a problem with the status quo? Debating the need for standalone ethical guidelines for research with people who use alcohol and other drugs. Olsen A., Mooney-Somers J., p. 637-642. - Factor analysis of treatment outcomes from a UK specialist addiction service: Relationship between the Leeds Dependence Questionnaire, Social Satisfaction Questionnaire and 10-item Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation. Fairhurst C., Bohnke J.R., Gabe R., Croudace T.J., Tober G., Raistrick D., p. 643-650. - Comparing subjective well-being and health-related quality of life of Australian drug users in treatment in Regional and Rural Victoria. Miller P.G., Hyder S., Zinkiewicz L., Droste N., Harris J.B., p. 651-657. - 'Trafficking' or 'personal use': Do people who regularly inject drugs understand Australian drug trafficking laws? Hughes C.E., Ritter A., Cowdery N., Sindicich N., p. 658-666. - Using Facebook to deliver a social norm intervention to reduce problem drinking at university. Ridout B., Campbell A., p. 667-673. - Developing a web-based intervention to increase motivation to change and encourage uptake of specialist face-to-face treatment by hospital inpatients: Change Drinking. Bewick B.M., Rumball K., Birtwistle J.C., Shaw J.R., Johnson O., Raistrick D., et al., p. 674-677. - Recent developments with the establishment of a regulated legal market for new psychoactive substances ('legal highs') in New Zealand. Wilkins C., p. 678-680. |
Cote : | Abonnement |
Lien : | http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/dar.2014.33.issue-6/issuetoc |
Dépouillements
Ajouter le résultat dans votre panierArticle : Périodique
The starting place for this essay is Knupfer and Room's insight that more restrictive norms around drinking and intoxication tend to be selectively applied to the economically dependent segments of society, such as women. However, since these au[...]
Article : Périodique
J. HOLMES ;
P. S. MEIER ;
A. BOOTH ;
A. BRENNAN
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Issues: Effectiveness of alcohol policy interventions varies across times and places. The circumstances under which effective polices can be successfully transferred between contexts are typically unexplored with little attention given to develo[...]
Article : Périodique
This paper describes Robin Room's contribution to cannabis policy debates over the period 1993-2010. It focuses on a controversy that erupted over a review that Room and the author undertook for the World Health Organization in the mid-1990s on [...]
Article : Périodique
C. E. HUGHES ;
A. RITTER ;
N. COWDERY ;
N. SINDICICH
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Introduction and Aims. Legal thresholds for drug trafficking, over which possession of an illicit drug is deemed 'trafficking' as opposed to 'personal use', are employed in all Australian states and territories excepting Queensland. In this pape[...]
Article : Périodique
Introduction and Aims: University students usually overestimate peer alcohol use, resulting in them 'drinking up' to perceived norms. Social norms theory suggests correcting these inflated perceptions can reduce alcohol consumption. Recent findi[...]
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