E-Book, Englisch, 416 Seiten
Rosenberg MD / Feder Psyd Behavioral Addictions
1. Auflage 2014
ISBN: 978-0-12-407858-1
Verlag: Elsevier Science & Techn.
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
Criteria, Evidence, and Treatment
E-Book, Englisch, 416 Seiten
ISBN: 978-0-12-407858-1
Verlag: Elsevier Science & Techn.
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
DSM-V broke new ground in May of 2013, designating a new disorder called 'behavioral addiction.' Clinicians immediately wanted to know: how is a behavioral addiction different from an impulse control disorder? What are the criteria for determining that some behaviors are addictions rather than impulses? What, if anything, does this mean in terms of effective treatment?Behavioral Addictions is the first and most authoritative text ever written on the subject of behavioral addictions. This comprehensive work explains the criteria used to determine addiction, the evidence for identifying assorted behaviors as addictions, and the evidence-based treatment for each.With contributions from preeminent experts covering an exhaustive list of behavioral addictions, this book is unique in its coverage of behavioral addictions, their criteria, and treatment. It is a valuable and timely resource for any clinician treating addictions. - A guide to understanding the new DSM-V designation of behavioral addiction - Defines the criteria for behavior to be considered an addiction designation - Discusses the evidence for behaviors meeting addiction criteria - Identifies what is now, likely will be, and is not a behavioral addiction per evidence - Discusses behaviors formerly considered impulse control disorders - Presents evidence-based treatment for each behavioral addiction
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
1;Front Cover;1
2;Behavioral Addictions: Criteria, Evidence, and Treatment;4
3;Copyright;5
4;DEDICATION;6
5;CONTENTS;8
6;FOREWORD;14
7;PREFACE;16
8;BIOGRAPHY;20
8.1;FOREWORD;21
8.2;CHAPTER 1: AN INTRODUCTION TO BEHAVIORAL ADDICTIONS;21
8.3;CHAPTER 2: BEHAVIORAL ADDICTION: THE NEXUS OF IMPULSIVITY AND COMPULSIVITY;21
8.4;CHAPTER 3: DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT OF GAMBLING DISORDER;21
8.5;CHAPTER 4: PROBLEMATIC ONLINE GAMING;22
8.6;CHAPTER 5: INTERNET ADDICTION DISORDER: OVERVIEW AND CONTROVERSIES;23
8.7;CHAPTER 6: SOCIAL NETWORKING ADDICTION: AN OVERVIEW OF PRELIMINARY FINDINGS;23
8.8;CHAPTER 7: FOOD ADDICTION: EVIDENCE, EVALUATION, AND TREATMENT;23
8.9;CHAPTER 8: NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE PHARMACOLOGICAL TREATMENT OF FOOD ADDICTION, OVEREATING, AND OBESITY;24
8.10;CHAPTER 9: SEX ADDICTION: AN OVERVIEW;25
8.11;CHAPTER 10: THE TYRANNY OF LOVE: LOVE ADDICTION—AN ANTHROPOLOGIST’S VIEW;25
8.12;CHAPTER 11: PICKING UP THE PIECES: HELPING PARTNERS AND FAMILY MEMBERS SURVIVE THE IMPACT OF SEX ADDICTION;25
8.13;CHAPTER 12: COMPULSIVE BUYING DISORDER;26
8.14;CHAPTER 13: EXERCISE ADDICTION;27
8.15;CHAPTER 14: MEDITATION AND SPIRITUALITY-BASED APPROACHES FOR ADDICTION;27
8.16;CHAPTER 15: BEHAVIORAL ADDICTION IN AMERICAN LAW: THE FUTURE AND THE EXPERT’S ROLE;28
9;LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS;30
10;Chapter 1 - An Introduction to Behavioral Addictions;34
10.1;THE HISTORY OF BEHAVIORAL ADDICTIONS;34
10.2;DEFINING AND DETERMINING CRITERIA FOR A BEHAVIORAL ADDICTION;36
10.3;THEORIES AND EVIDENCE IN SUPPORT OF BEHAVIORAL ADDICTIONS;38
10.4;GUIDING PRINCIPLES FOR THE TREATMENT OF BEHAVIORAL ADDICTIONS;44
10.5;SOCIETAL AND LEGAL ISSUES;47
10.6;REFERENCES;48
11;Chapter 2 - Behavioral Addiction: The Nexus of Impulsivity and Compulsivity;52
11.1;INTRODUCTION;52
11.2;IMPULSIVITY AND COMPULSIVITY: WHAT’S IT ALL ABOUT?;52
11.3;HOW DO IMPULSIVITY AND COMPULSIVITY RELATE?;53
11.4;FROM IMPULSIVITY TO COMPULSIVITY IN SUBSTANCE USE DISORDER;54
11.5;BEHAVIORAL ADDICTION: ON THE BORDER BETWEEN IMPULSIVITY AND COMPULSIVITY;55
11.6;KLEPTOMANIA BEHAVIOR;56
11.7;AN ABC MODEL TO ASSESS AND MANAGE COMPULSIVE-IMPULSIVE DISORDERS;60
11.8;CONCLUSIONS;63
11.9;REFERENCES;64
12;Chapter 3 - Diagnosis and Treatment of Gambling Disorder;68
12.1;INTRODUCTION;68
12.2;CLINICAL CHARACTERISTICS;69
12.3;CLINICAL ASSESSMENT;71
12.4;SCREENING/DIAGNOSTIC INSTRUMENTS;72
12.5;TREATMENT OPTIONS;73
12.6;PSYCHOTHERAPY;74
12.7;PHARMACOTHERAPY;81
12.8;CONCLUSIONS;85
12.9;REFERENCES;87
13;Chapter 4 - Problematic Online Gaming;94
13.1;HISTORY AND TYPOLOGY OF ONLINE GAMES;94
13.2;DEFINING PROBLEMATIC ONLINE GAMING;97
13.3;SYMPTOMATOLOGY AND CONSEQUENCES;101
13.4;ASSESSMENT;103
13.5;EPIDEMIOLOGY;107
13.6;ETIOLOGY;111
13.7;PREVENTION AND TREATMENT;118
13.8;REFERENCES;121
13.9;APPENDIX 4-1. PROBLEMATIC ONLINE GAMING QUESTIONNAIRE (POGQ);127
13.10;APPENDIX 4-2. MOTIVES FOR ONLINE GAMING QUESTIONNAIRE (MOGQ);129
14;Chapter 5 - Internet Addiction Disorder: Overview and Controversies;132
14.1;INTRODUCTION: INTERNET ADDICTION DISORDER AND ITS TREATMENT;132
14.2;DIAGNOSIS AND CLINICAL CRITERIA;133
14.3;ASSESSMENT OF INTERNET ADDICTION;133
14.4;PREVALENCE RATES;134
14.5;PSYCHIATRIC COMORBIDITY;135
14.6;RELATIONSHIP OF INTERNET ADDICTION WITH DRUG AND ALCOHOL USE;135
14.7;THE PHENOMENOLOGY OF INTERNET ADDICTION;137
14.8;PERSONALITY AND PSYCHOSOCIAL FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH IAD;137
14.9;COGNITIVE FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH PROBLEMATIC INTERNET USE;138
14.10;PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH HAZARDS;139
14.11;TREATMENT;139
14.12;CONCLUSIONS;141
14.13;DECLARATION OF INTEREST;142
14.14;ACKNOWLEDGMENTS;142
14.15;REFERENCES;142
14.16;APPENDIX 5-1 INTERNET ADDICTION TEST (IAT);149
15;Chapter 6 - Social Networking Addiction: An Overview of Preliminary Findings;152
15.1;BRIEF HISTORY OF SOCIAL NETWORKING;152
15.2;ETIOLOGY AND THEORIES OF SOCIAL NETWORKING ADDICTION;155
15.3;EPIDEMIOLOGY: EMPIRICAL STUDIES OF SOCIAL NETWORKING ADDICTION;157
15.4;PREVENTION AND TREATMENT OF SOCIAL NETWORKING ADDICTION;169
15.5;CONCLUSIONS;170
15.6;REFERENCES;172
16;Chapter 7 - Food Addiction: Evidence, Evaluation, and Treatment;176
16.1;INTRODUCTION;176
16.2;CRITERIA AND DEFINITION;177
16.3;EPIDEMIOLOGY;179
16.4;EVIDENCE FOR FOOD ADDICTION;180
16.5;TREATMENT;186
16.6;PREVENTION: PUBLIC HEALTH AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS;198
16.7;CONCLUSION;200
16.8;REFERENCES;201
16.9;INSTRUCTION SHEET FOR THE YALE FOOD ADDICTION SCALE;215
17;Chapter 8 - New Directions in the Pharmacological Treatment of Food Addiction, Overeating, and Obesity;218
17.1;INTRODUCTION;218
17.2;THE DRIVE TO OVEREAT;220
17.3;FOOD ADDICTION;220
17.4;REWARD DEFICIENCY SYNDROME;223
17.5;FOOD REWARD SYSTEM;224
17.6;SURGICAL TREATMENTS OF OBESITY;228
17.7;PHARMACOTHERAPIES FOR TREATMENT OF OBESITY AND FOOD ADDICTION;230
17.8;IN THE PIPELINE;233
17.9;FDA-APPROVED MEDICATIONS THAT DO NOT HAVE FDA INDICATIONS FOR WEIGHT LOSS;235
17.10;TREATMENT APPROACH BASED ON THE DRUG ABUSE MODEL;237
17.11;CONCLUSION;240
17.12;REFERENCES;241
18;CHAPTER 9 - SEX ADDICTION: AN OVERVIEW*;248
18.1;PREVALENCE;249
18.2;SA-RELATED DIAGNOSES IN THE ICD AND DSM;249
18.3;SCREENING INSTRUMENTS FOR SA;254
18.4;CYBERSEX;255
18.5;COMORBIDITY IN SA-RELATED DISORDERS;255
18.6;ADDICTION INTERACTION DISORDER;257
18.7;THE POSSIBLE NEUROSCIENCE OF SA;258
18.8;TREATMENT OF SEX ADDICTION;260
18.9;SUMMARY;265
18.10;REFERENCES;266
19;Chapter 10
- The Tyranny of Love: Love Addiction—An Anthropologist’s View;270
19.1;ROMANTIC LOVE AS A POSITIVE ADDICTION;271
19.2;ROMANTIC REJECTION AS A NEGATIVE ADDICTION;274
19.3;EVOLUTION OF ROMANTIC ADDICTIONS;278
19.4;INFIDELITY INTENSIFIES REJECTION ADDICTION;282
19.5;DIVORCE INTENSIFIES REJECTION ADDICTION;285
19.6;BIOPSYCHOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES OF REJECTION;286
19.7;PERSONALITY AND LOVE ADDICTIONS;286
19.8;IMPLICATIONS FOR TREATMENT;289
19.9;CONCLUSION;292
19.10;REFERENCES;293
20;Chapter 11 - Picking Up the Pieces: Helping Partners and Family Members Survive the Impact of Sex Addiction;300
20.1;TREATING PARTNERS OF SEX ADDICTS: CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS;301
20.2;STAGGERED DISCLOSURE AS A TRAUMA TO THE PARTNER;303
20.3;TREATMENT FOR THE PARTNER;305
20.4;IMPACT OF SEX ADDICTION ON CHILDREN;312
20.5;REFERENCES;316
20.6;APPENDIX 11-1 RECOMMENDED READING;316
21;Chapter 12 - Compulsive Buying Disorder;318
21.1;INTRODUCTION;318
21.2;DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA OF COMPULSIVE BUYING DISORDER;321
21.3;EPIDEMIOLOGY OF COMPULSIVE BUYING DISORDER;326
21.4;COMORBIDITY;333
21.5;TREATMENT;340
21.6;NEXT STEPS AND FURTHER RESEARCH;344
21.7;REFERENCES;345
21.8;SCORING INSTRUCTIONS;348
22;Chapter 13 - Exercise Addiction;350
22.1;THE HISTORY OF EXERCISE ADDICTION;350
22.2;DEFINITION AND DIAGNOSIS;351
22.3;ASSESSMENT;353
22.4;EPIDEMIOLOGY;357
22.5;COMORBIDITY;359
22.6;ETIOLOGY;360
22.7;TREATMENT;364
22.8;ACKNOWLEDGMENTS;368
22.9;REFERENCES;368
22.10;EXERCISE DEPENDENCE SCALE;374
23;Chapter 14 - Meditation and Spirituality-Based Approaches for Addiction;376
23.1;INTRODUCTION;376
23.2;LESSONS FROM ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS AND 12-STEP FACILITATION;376
23.3;YOGA AND ADDICTION;378
23.4;MINDFULNESS-BASED MEDITATION;380
23.5;TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION (TM);381
23.6;SUDARSHAN KRIYA YOGA (SKY);382
23.7;HOW DOES MEDITATION/SKY WORK?;387
23.8;CONCLUSION;389
23.9;REFERENCES;390
24;Chapter 15 - Behavioral Addiction in American Law: The Future and the Expert’s Role;394
24.1;INTRODUCTION;394
24.2;BEHAVIORAL ADDICTION IN THE LAW OF THE UNITED STATES - LEGAL ISSUES IN WHICH BEHAVIORAL ADDICTION MAY BE CONSIDERED;395
24.3;PITFALLS FOR THE EXPERT WITNESS;400
24.4;CONCLUSIONS;404
24.5;REFERENCES;405
25;INDEX;406
Biography
Co-Editors of Behavioral Addictions: Criteria, Evidence, and Treatment
Kenneth Paul Rosenberg, MD, is a board-certified Addiction Psychiatrist and a Clinical Associate Professor in Psychiatry at the New York Presbyterian Hospital–Weill Cornell Medical College. He is Consulting Editor for the Journal of Sex and Marital Therapy, a Distinguished Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association, and has been recognized on the lists of U.S. World & News Report Best Doctors and New York Magazine’s Top Addiction Psychiatrists. Dr. Rosenberg is Founder and Director of Upper East Health Behavioral Medicine in Manhattan, a psychiatric practice that provides treatment for individuals and families recovering from chemical and behavioral addictions. He has discussed addiction on national broadcasts of HBO, PBS, ABC, CNBC, and CNN and in the New York Times, Washington Post, Huffington Post, Time Magazine, and People Magazine. Dr. Rosenberg has produced educational films on mental health and addiction for HBO and PBS, and is a recipient of a George Foster Peabody Award. Laura Curtiss Feder, PsyD, is a licensed clinical psychologist and mental health consultant in private practice in New York and Massachusetts. Her areas of specialty include treating addiction and compulsive behaviors, as well as program evaluation and college counseling. She has engaged in many years of clinical and research work in the fields of substance abuse and behavioral addiction. She has contributed to scholarly publications on the assessment and treatment of substance abuse and written for popular audiences on the emotional aspects of skin picking and acne on Birchbox’s blog and in 100 Acne Tips & Solutions: The Clear Clinic Guide to Perfect Skin. Dr. Feder holds her doctorate in clinical psychology from Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, and completed postdoctoral fellowships at the William Alanson White Institute, including receiving a certificate in the treatment of eating disorders, compulsions, and addictions. To learn more about Dr. Feder, her research, consulting and clinical practice please see www.drlaurafeder.com. Foreword
Charles P. O’Brien, MD, PhD, is the Vice Chair of Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania and the Director of the prestigious Center for Studies in Addiction. As a pre-eminent addiction researcher, Dr. O’Brien has made many important discoveries and contributions over the past 30 years that have become the standard of care in addiction treatment throughout the world, including developing medications to treat alcohol, opioid, and cocaine dependence; and increasing the understanding of the clinical aspects of addiction and the neurobiology of relapse. Chapter 1: An Introduction to Behavioral Addictions
Kenneth Paul Rosenberg, MD (see above) Laura Curtiss Feder, PsyD (see above) Chapter 2: Behavioral Addiction: The Nexus of Impulsivity and Compulsivity
Natalie Leckie Cuzen, MA, is a Neuropsychologist and researcher at the University of Cape Town, with a background in addiction research in both adult and pediatric populations. She has also worked with individuals with obsessive-compulsive and substance use disorders in the United Kingdom. Dan J. Stein, FRCPC, PhD, is Professor & Chair of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Cape Town, and Director of the South African Medical Research Council (MRC) Unit on Anxiety & Stress Disorders. He has undertaken research on compulsive and impulsive disorders for many years and was Chair of the DSM-5 subWorkgroup on obsessive-compulsive and related disorders. Chapter 3: Diagnosis and Treatment of Gambling Disorder
Jon Grant, MD, JD, MPH, is a Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience at the University of Chicago. Dr. Grant has written more than 200 peer-reviewed articles and book chapters on the phenomenology and pharmacological management of behavioral addictions and impulse control disorders, particularly pathological gambling, kleptomania, and grooming disorders. Brian Odlaug, MPH, is a Visiting Researcher in the Department of Public Health, Faculty of Health & Medical Sciences at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. He has authored or co-authored more than 120 peer-reviewed articles and book chapters on the phenomenology, treatment, and characteristics of mental illness, specializing in the areas of addiction, impulse control, and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Chapter 4: Problematic Online Gaming
Orsolya Király, MA, earned her master’s degrees in Marketing and Sociology at Babe?-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania. She is currently a researcher at the Doctoral School of Psychology, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary. Her research focus is the psychology of video games and she is particularly interested in the phenomenon of problematic gaming (“gaming addiction”) and other behavioral addictions. Katalin Nagygyörgy, MA, completed her master’s degree in Psychology from the University of Szeged, Hungary, and is now a doctoral candidate at the Institute of Psychology, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary. Her focus of research is the psychology of online games and virtual environments, mainly the motivational background of problematic online gaming. Mark D. Griffiths, PhD, CPsychol, FBPsS, FRSA, AcSS, is a Chartered Psychologist and Professor of Gambling Studies at the Nottingham Trent University (United Kingdom). He is internationally known for his work on behavioral addiction and has published more than 430 refereed research papers, 3 books, more than 100 book chapters, and has won 14 awards for his research. Zsolt Demetrovics, PhD, is a Clinical Psychologist and Cultural Anthropologist and has a doctorate in addiction science. He is Professor of Psychology and Director of the Institute of Psychology at the Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary. His primary research is focused on the epidemiology and psychological background of legal and illegal substance use and behavioral addictions. Chapter 5: Internet Addiction Disorder: Overview and Controversies
Aviv Weinstein, PhD, is a Psychologist and Senior Lecturer at the Behavioral Sciences Department at Ariel University and a Senior Research fellow at the Department of Nuclear Medicine at Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center in Israel. He has conducted brain imaging studies on the effects of drugs and video game playing on the brain and has published several reviews on behavioral addictions, particularly on Internet and video game addiction. Laura Curtiss Feder, PsyD (see above) Kenneth Paul Rosenberg, MD (see above) Pinhas Dannon, MD, is a Psychiatrist and Head of the Psychiatric Rehabilitation Department at Beer Yaaqov Ness Ziona Center for Mental Health. He is also an Associate Professor at Sackler School of Medicine at Tel Aviv University in Israel and has a private practice specializing in the treatment of drug and behavioral addictions. He has published extensively on gambling, kleptomania, and other behavioral addictions. Chapter 6: Social Networking Addiction: An Overview of Preliminary Findings
Mark D. Griffiths, PhD, CPsychol, FBPsS, FRSA, AcSS (see above) Daria J. Kuss, PhD, is a doctoral researcher at Nottingham Trent University interested in Internet culture and psychopathology. With her research, she intends to establish a comprehensive picture of Internet addiction by highlighting its clinical and societal relevance as discrete and prevalent disorder, and has published widely in the field. Zsolt Demetrovics, PhD (see above) Chapter 7: Food Addiction: Evidence, Evaluation, and Treatment
Yvonne H. C. Yau, MSc, is a Postgraduate Associate at the Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine. She has published several book chapters on obesity, binge-eating disorder, and food addiction. Carrie D. Gottlieb, PhD, is a clinical psychologist in private practice in New York City focusing on the treatment of eating disorders and addictions. She is currently on the faculty of the William Alanson White Institute Eating Disorders, Compulsions, and Addictions Program. Lindsay C. Krasna, MA, EdM, RD, CDN, is a Registered Dietitian and Certified Dietitian–Nutritionist, with graduate training in mental health counseling and addictions. She works in New York City as a Nutrition Counselor and specializes in eating disorders. Marc N. Potenza, MD, PhD, is a Professor of Psychiatry, Child Study, and Neurobiology at Yale University. He is the Director of the Center of Excellence in Gambling Research and the Yale Program for Research on Impulsivity and Impulse Control Disorders. Dr. Potenza has published multiple research articles and book chapters on obesity, binge-eating disorder, and food addiction. Chapter 8: New Directions in the Pharmacological Treatment of Food Addiction, Overeating, and Obesity
Amelia A. Davis, MD, is the Chief of the Adult Eating Disorders Recovery Center (EDRC) program in Psychiatry at the University of Florida. Dr. Davis specializes in evaluation and...