Format
Book
Publication Date
Published by / Citation
Drug and Alcohol Findings
Original Language

English

Keywords
alcohol
treatment
psychosocial
guidance
12-step
mutual aid
aftercare
NICE
commissioning
United Kingdom
UK

England’s Health Care Gatekeeper Endorses Mutual Aid. Highlight from Effectiveness Bank Alcohol Treatment Matrix Cell E4

ENGLAND’S HEALTH CARE GATEKEEPER ENDORSES MUTUAL AID

Taking a leap away from its comfort zone, England’s gatekeeper to the public provision of health and social care embraced non-professional and unregulated interventions in the form of mutual aid groups as an aftercare resource for treatment services and a standalone alternative, calling on commissioners and services to offer encouragement and practical support. Did NICE really have enough evidence?

To go direct to the featured sections click the link below or paste it in to your web browser address box, being sure to enter the whole address:
As aftercare: https://findings.org.uk/PHP/dl.php?file=Matrix/Alcohol/E4.htm&s=ml&sf=mx&format=open#issue3
As a standalone alternative: https://findings.org.uk/PHP/dl.php?file=Matrix/Alcohol/E4.htm&s=ml&sf=mx&format=open#issue4
______________________________________

Drawn from cell E4 of the Alcohol Treatment Matrix, a workforce development resource mapping key research and guidance on alcohol brief interventions and treatment.

“Succinct, relevant reports leaving me with more hours in the week to work with clients. Saves several hours a month ... It is invaluable to me. Matrices join everything up and deliver a kind of bottom line ... superb service.”
Dr Sandy Francis, lecturer, Action on Addiction and University of Bath, and psychological therapist and supervisor, National Health Service, England
______________________________________

Sent by Drug and Alcohol Findings via a third party mailing list to alert you to site updates and recent UK-relevant evaluations and reviews of drug/alcohol interventions. Refresh of the Alcohol Treatment Matrix is funded by Alcohol Change UK. Findings is also supported by the Society for the Study of Addiction, and advised by the National Addiction Centre