Recovery Book
By (Author) A. Mooney
By (author) Avigail Eisenberg
Workman Publishing
Workman Publishing
10th January 1992
United States
General
Non Fiction
362.29128
Paperback
597
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
816g
Announcing a completely revised and updated second edition of The Recovery Book, the bible of addiction recovery. Written for the 23 million Americans struggling with alcohol and drugs, it is "a clear, accurate, and comprehensive resource--for patients, their families, and helping professionals" (Anthony B. Radcliffe, M.D., former president, American Society of Addiction Medicine).
Dr. Al Mooney, who lectures internationally on recovery, writing with medical and health journalists Howard Eisenberg and Catherine Dold, covers all the latest in addiction science and recovery techniques. Extensive research in neuroplasticity, for example, sheds new light on how alcohol and drugs actually alter pathways in the brain--but also how this same process, when trained in recovery, can remold the brain, making sobriety a routine way of life. A new understanding of gender and addiction leads to revised insights, techniques, and new hope for treating women in recovery. The book also covers the latest problems and treatments for prescription drugs (now more pernicious than illegal drugs); up-to-date models for intervention; and more.
But what really sets the book apart is its question-and-answer format--"My wife wants me to go to AA, and I think that's ridiculous. How can I settle this argument" "I take a few oxycodone pills each week. They're prescription, so they must be safe, right" "I've been in this treatment center for nearly a week. I feel great. I'm cured. Why can't I leave now" That simple, direct approach makes the daunting journey to sobriety doable.
Al J. Mooney, M.D., currently the Director of Addiction Medicine and Recovery at Willingway, lectures internationally on the latest science and treatments for recovery. Howard Eisenberg is a medical journalist and coauthor of How to Be Your Own Doctor (Sometimes). Catherine Dold has covered health and environmental issues for The New York Times, Smithsonian, Discover, Self, and many other national publications.