First, research-based practices for addiction and substance use disorders tailored, for the client, ethnical background, and their environment. With attention to, the characteristics of the client, such as age, ethnicity, gender, and the extent of the client's drug use. Next, the approach, emphasis on prevention programs, which enhance protective factors with the client in mind and reverse or reduce risk factors affecting the client's well-being. Second, addresses all forms of drug abuse to meet the person in the middle. To clarify, research -based practices explores alternatives to drug abuse and the pleasurable moments retrieved from the drug abuse. Not to mention, the involvement of educational and social resources backing research-based …show more content…
Next, the importance of counselors using research-based practices from a professional point, one an ethical obligation to the client and self. Second, research shows the counselor values and perspectives influence treatment outcome, therapy goals, and assessment strategies generating knowledge, using theory. Equally important, the counselors emerge theoretical practices such as tools, interventions, and procedures used for research-based practices. In addition, researched-based practices, strategically maximize the client’s outcome, by using existing knowledge or evidence. “Another key point, individuals in critical mode or relapse as the counselor, extended treatment, and mutual help groups, and monitoring complete the course of implementing research-based practices, which help the counselor support the client” (Finney, & Hagedorn, 2011, p. …show more content…
Equally important, the client may be placed or assigned in a short-term or long -term facility, to receive professional researched based treatment. Not to mention, thirty-day treatment facilities, hospitals, and inpatient settings, outpatient settings, or rehab. The counselor may determine the length of stay and the therapeutic approach is taken, with the client and the disorder in mind. Equally important, the setting must correspond to the disorder for the treatment or intervention setting, to adequately work and fit the needs if the client’s substance use disorder. Hence, the needs fit the client and the therapist can follow the ethical guidelines and utilize research-based information for the right treatment