Substance Abuse: Research and Treatment (Jan 2013)

Consumers’ Experiences in Dual Focus Mutual Aid for Co-occurring Substance Use and Mental Health Disorders

  • Harlan Matusow,
  • Honoria Guarino,
  • Andrew Rosenblum,
  • Howard Vogel,
  • Thomas Uttaro,
  • Sadiqua Khabir,
  • Martin Rini,
  • Thomas Moore,
  • Stephen Magura

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4137/SART.S11006
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Mutual aid fellowships have been shown to improve outcomes for those with co-occurring substance use and mental illness disorders. Processes associated with usefulness include helper therapy (the assumption of a helping role to foster commitment) and reciprocal learning (the sharing of problems and solutions among members). The present qualitative investigation used focus groups comprised a subset of participants in Double Trouble in Recovery (DTR), a 12-step mutual aid group for those with co-occurring disorders, to gather their subjective perceptions of the groups. Participants emphasized that in linking them to others with similar problems, the DTR groups played a vital emotional role in their lives and provided a needed venue for information sharing that might have been otherwise unavailable.