is a time-limited,
focused psychotherapy that has been adapted for heroin- and cocaine-addicted
individuals. The therapy has two main components:
- Supportive techniques to help patients feel comfortable in
discussing their personal experiences.
- Expressive techniques to help patients identify and work
through interpersonal relationship issues.
Special attention is paid to the role of drugs in relation to
problem feelings and behaviors, and how problems may be solved without recourse
to drugs.
The efficacy of individual supportive-expressive psychotherapy
has been tested with patients in methadone maintenance treatment who had
psychiatric problems. In a comparison with patients receiving only drug
counseling, both groups fared similarly with regard to opiate use, but the
supportive-expressive psychotherapy group had lower cocaine use and required
less methadone. Also, the patients who received supportive-expressive
psychotherapy main-tained many of the gains they had made. In an earlier study,
supportive-expressive psychotherapy, when added to drug counseling, improved
outcomes for opiate addicts in metha-done treatment with moderately severe
psychiatric problems. |