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Pacific Bay Recovery Center in San Diego Now Achieving 90% Success…

Pacific Bay Recovery Center in San Diego Now Achieving 90% Success…

San Diego, California (PRWEB) October 13, 2015 Pacific Bay Recovery Center is now achieving over a 90% success rate for addiction rehab for alcohol abuse, prescription drug addiction and dual diagnosis. Patients are able to receive both inpatient and outpatient treatment depending on their needs with Board Certified providers. Call (619) 663-3595 for more information and scheduling with the top d
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Substance use disorder treatment retention and completion: a prospective study of horse-assisted therapy (HAT) for young adults

Background:
Keeping substance use disorder patients actively engaged in treatment is a challenge. Horse-assisted therapy (HAT) is increasingly used as a complementary therapy, with claimed motivational and other benefits to physical and psychological health. This naturalistic study aimed to assess HAT’s impact on the duration and completion of treatment for young substance users at Oslo Universi
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The impact of traumatic brain injury on patient-reported physical and mental health

Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) is a major cause of disability, with staggering social consequences, but little is known on what determines the impact of TBI from the patient’s perspective.
In an audit of 240 patients (172 males, median age: 42 years, range: 20–89 years) who attended our multidisciplinary TBI clinic, we examined the impact of cognitive function, depression, sleep, history of su
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Early Onset Alcohol Use and Self‐Harm: A Discordant Twin Analysis

ConclusionsThe equivalent increase in odds of SA for both MZ and DZ twins suggests that causal or individual‐specific influences explain the link between EAU and SA. For NSSI, elevated odds for DZ twins and nonsignificant findings for MZ twins implicate correlated genetic factors in the association between EAU and NSSI. Future studies should test mechanisms through which EAU may causally influen
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Disentangling Contributions of Bar Attendance, Drinking, and Other Factors to Elevated Acute Alcohol Problems on the U.S.–Mexico Border

ConclusionsBar attendance and associated increases in drinking play a key, unique role in the high levels of acute alcohol problems among the border’s young adult population that cannot be entirely explained by sociodemographic or social‐cognitive characteristics of young border residents, by contextual effects of bars on problems, or by broader neighborhood factors. Bar attendance in particular
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