Hierarchy of Recovery: From Abstinence to Self-Actualization
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.87 (908 Votes) |
Asin | : | 1568388845 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 128 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2013-07-20 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
He is an adjunct staff member of the Skagit Recovery Center's intensive outpatient program, a consultant to Sundown M Ranch treatment center, and a member of the Washington State Department of Health Chemical Dependency Professional Advisory Committee. About the Author Robert S. Helgoe, Ph.D., teaches in the human services program at the Skagit Valley College, Mount Vernon, Washington. . He is the author of a new curriculum that teaches treatment providers how to measure client progress
"disappointed" according to Karlynox. This book did not turn out to be what I hoped it would. I haven't even finished it, it was so dry, had too many citings for other published work, and was simply disappointing.
In this age of accountability, measuring progress scientifically instead of subjectively is essential for treatment providers. According to psychologist Abraham Maslow, clients progress through a hierarchy of needs that begins with physiological needs and ends with self-actualization. Clients enter recovery because they need to survive. This innovative measuring tool makes it possible.. Hierarchy of Recovery explores these principles in an engaging discussion. Tools such as personal inventories and checklists help you pinpoint where your clients are within the hierarchy. By knowing this, you know how to help them achieve the next level. When they maintain recovery because they wish to thrive, they have taken an important step toward self-actualization. According to author Robert Helgoe, the process of recovery follows the same hierarchy
He is the author of a new curriculum that teaches treatment providers how to measure client progress. He is an adjunct staff member of the Skagit Recovery Center's intensive outpatient program, a consultant to Sundown M Ranch treatment center, and a member of the Washington State Department of Health Chemical Dependency P