On Mourning and Recovery: Integrating Stages of Grief and Change Toward a Neuroscience-Based Model of Attachment Adaptation in Addiction Treatment.

Psychodyn Psychiatry

Chair, Division of Transpersonal Counseling and Psychology, Associate Professor, Graduate School of Counseling and Psychology, Naropa University, Boulder, CO.

Published: July 2018

Interpersonal attachment and drug addiction share many attributes across their behavioral and neurobiological domains. Understanding the overlapping brain circuitry of attachment formation and addiction illuminates a deeper understanding of the pathogenesis of trauma-related mental illnesses and comorbid substance use disorders, and the extent to which ending an addiction is complicated by being a sort of mourning process. Attention to the process of addiction recovery-as a form of grieving-in which Kubler-Ross's stages of grief and Prochaska's stages of change are ultimately describing complementary viewpoints on a general process of neural network and attachment remodeling, could lead to more effective and integrative psychotherapy and medication strategies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6383361PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1521/pdps.2017.45.4.451DOI Listing

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