Very little research has been conducted on what time window provides a representative picture of daily drinking. With respect to pretreatment drinking, one study that used the Timeline Followback (TLFB) with problem drinkers found that a 3-month window is generally representative of annual pretreatment drinking. The objective of the present study was to determine the shortest representative time window for reports of annual posttreatment drinking. A second objective was to determine which of two time windows, 90 days from the end of treatment or 90 days prior to the end of follow-up, was the most representative proxy for annual posttreatment drinking. TLFB reports from 467 problem drinkers who participated in a randomized controlled trial o...
BackgroundTreatment for alcohol use disorders (AUDs) has traditionally been abstinence oriented, but...
Early intervention for hazardous alcohol use has been shown repeatedly to be effective in reducing a...
This study examines relapse and recovery in Project MATCH. The study examines the transitions betwee...
Very little research has been conducted on what time window provides a representative picture of dai...
When assessing individuals with alcohol use disorders, measurement of drinking can be a resource int...
Objective: A recent study comparing the Quick Drinking Screen (QDS) with the Timeline Followback (TL...
Research staff typically gather treatment outcome data, whereas clinicians perform aftercare contact...
The Timeline Followback (TLFB), a retrospective calendar-based measure of daily substance use, was i...
This study was designed to investigate the effects of treatment length restriction and follow-up int...
Objective The current study uses a within-subjects randomized design with the Timeline Followback (T...
SVMMartY. Drinking during a 30-day pretreatment period was found not to be representative of longer ...
The Alcohol Timeline Followback (TLFB) has been shown to be a psychometrically sound assessment inst...
Objective: The current study compares retrospective self-reports of quantity and frequency of drinki...
Since alcohol research involves both clinical and non-clinical populations, it is important to evalu...
Background: The ultimate goal of alcohol treatment research is to develop interventions that help in...
BackgroundTreatment for alcohol use disorders (AUDs) has traditionally been abstinence oriented, but...
Early intervention for hazardous alcohol use has been shown repeatedly to be effective in reducing a...
This study examines relapse and recovery in Project MATCH. The study examines the transitions betwee...
Very little research has been conducted on what time window provides a representative picture of dai...
When assessing individuals with alcohol use disorders, measurement of drinking can be a resource int...
Objective: A recent study comparing the Quick Drinking Screen (QDS) with the Timeline Followback (TL...
Research staff typically gather treatment outcome data, whereas clinicians perform aftercare contact...
The Timeline Followback (TLFB), a retrospective calendar-based measure of daily substance use, was i...
This study was designed to investigate the effects of treatment length restriction and follow-up int...
Objective The current study uses a within-subjects randomized design with the Timeline Followback (T...
SVMMartY. Drinking during a 30-day pretreatment period was found not to be representative of longer ...
The Alcohol Timeline Followback (TLFB) has been shown to be a psychometrically sound assessment inst...
Objective: The current study compares retrospective self-reports of quantity and frequency of drinki...
Since alcohol research involves both clinical and non-clinical populations, it is important to evalu...
Background: The ultimate goal of alcohol treatment research is to develop interventions that help in...
BackgroundTreatment for alcohol use disorders (AUDs) has traditionally been abstinence oriented, but...
Early intervention for hazardous alcohol use has been shown repeatedly to be effective in reducing a...
This study examines relapse and recovery in Project MATCH. The study examines the transitions betwee...