{"product_id":"womens-group-treatment-for-substance-use-disorder-therapist-guide","title":"Women's Group Treatment for Substance Use Disorder: Therapist Guide","description":"\u003cp\u003e\"Women with Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) and other Substance Use Disorders (SUDs) have different etiology, mortality, relapse antecedents, clinical presentation, and course of the disorders than men with AUD\/SUD (see Epstein \u0026amp; Menges, 2013; Epstein et al., 2018 ). For instance, relative to men, women report higher comorbidity of mood, anxiety, posttraumatic stress, eating, and personality disorders (Rosenthal, 2013); and women are likely to drink alone, in secrecy, daily, in response to relationship difficulties (Zweig, McCrady, \u0026amp; Epstein, 2009) and in response to negative emotional triggers (Abulseoud et al., 2013). Women tend to have social networks that include family members and romantic partners with SUD (Leonard \u0026amp; Homish, 2008) who do not support recovery (McCrady, 2004). Many relapse antecedents are more prevalent in women than men, including being alone, negative affect, interpersonal problems and relationship distress (Walitzer \u0026amp; Dearing, 2006). Mediators of treatment on AUD outcomes also may differ by gender; mechanisms of change generally relevant to women likely include alleviation of negative affect, enhanced coping skills and self-care, improved interpersonal functioning (Velasquez \u0026amp; Stotts, 2003), and greater emotion regulation (Ashley, Marsden, \u0026amp; Brady, 2003; Timko, Finney, \u0026amp; Moos, 2005). Gender differences in clinical presentation of addiction, relapse antecedents, and mediators suggest that treatments tailored to women's concerns may enhance access to treatment and yield more positive outcomes than gender-neutral programs. Treatment utilization for alcohol use problems is lower for women than for men. Women may be more likely to seek help if single-gender treatment is offered (Cucciare et al., 2013; Lewis et al., 2016), however, female-segregated treatments have been found to be efficacious only if they include female-specific programming (Epstein \u0026amp; Menges, 2013; Holzhauer, Cucciare \u0026amp; Epstein, 2020)\"--\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Doctor David","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":48794987200727,"sku":null,"price":25.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0828\/7204\/1687\/files\/content_dc72ce5d-9458-4276-95d0-80f627c3ef2d.png?v=1781756728","url":"https:\/\/gsrns9-jz.myshopify.com\/products\/womens-group-treatment-for-substance-use-disorder-therapist-guide","provider":"4-Gyneco","version":"1.0","type":"link"}