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Browsing by Subject "holistic approach"
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Item Access to Recovery and Recidivism Among Former Prison Inmates(Sage, 2015) Ray, Bradley; Grommon, Eric; Buchanan, Victoria; Brown, Brittany; Watson, Dennis P.; Department of Health Policy and Management, Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public HealthAccess to Recovery (ATR) is a SAMHSA-funded initiative that offers a mix of clinical and supportive services for substance abuse. ATR clients choose which services will help to overcome barriers in their road to recovery, and a recovery consultant provides vouchers and helps link the client to these community resources. One of ATR’s goals was to provide services to those involved in the criminal justice system in the hopes that addressing substance abuse issues could reduce subsequent criminal behaviors. This study examines this goal by looking at recidivism among a sample of clients in one state’s ATR program who returned to the community after incarceration. Results suggest there were few differential effects of service selections on subsequent recidivism. However, there are significant differences in recidivism rates among the agencies that provided ATR services. Agencies with more resources and a focus on prisoner reentry had better recidivism outcomes than those that focus only on substance abuse services.Item Gynecological cancers: an alternative approach to healing(Future Science, 2017-07-12) Saso, Srdjan; Jones, Benjamin P; Bracewell-Milnes, Timothy; Huseyin, Gulsen; Boyle, Deborah C; Del Priore, Giuseppe; Smith, James Richard; Obstetrics and Gynecology, School of MedicineGrief and hope are two conflicting emotions that a patient recently diagnosed with cancer has to master. The real challenge for gynecologic oncologists is how to reach out. Conventional wisdom states that offering patients focus and belief when combating cancer in their lives allows them to embrace hope with greater confidence, which minimizes their grief. Three pictorial models are presented: ‘4-cusp approach’ model used at the initial consultation; ‘tapestry of bereavement or landscape of grief’ model at the postsurgery consultation; and ‘Venn-diagram’ model at any time during patient management. We have applied these models in our practice and believe that they can act as a fulcrum for the patient, the family and healthcare team around which therapy should be centered., Grief and hope are two emotions that a patient faces if diagnosed with cancer. The real challenge for the doctor is how to reach out and help the patient through this process. A doctor's role may be to offer focus and belief to the patient which may allow her to embrace hope with greater confidence. This will hopefully lessen the grief. We present three models which we believe can play a crucial part: ‘4-cusp approach’ used at the initial consultation; ‘tapestry of bereavement or landscape of grief model’ at the postsurgery consultation; and ‘Venn-diagram model’ at any time during care.