Speakers included
Trevor McCarthy, Mobile: 07980 657 573, email trev.mcc@virgin.net
New Directions in the Study of Alcohol Group (NDSAG) is concerned with the use and abuse of alcohol in society, and the treatment of people with alcohol-related problems. We aim to promote a better understanding of these topics by providing a forum for debate - our annual conference - where attendees are encouraged to exchange ideas, share results and learn about new developments in the field.
| Roz Brooks (Norwich); | Mike Loveday (Norwich); | Maggie Wheeler (Norwich); |
| Jocelyn Pike (Norwich); | Jim McCambridge (London); | Anne Lingford-Hughes (London); |
| Tim Leighton (Salisbury); | Annette Fleming (Birmingham); | Richard Velleman (Bath); |
| Alex Copello (Birmingham); | Pip Mason (Birmingham); | Robin Davidson (Belfast); |
| John Booth Davies (Glasgow); | Trevor McCarthy (Leicester); | Nick Heather (Newcastle); |
| Ray Hodgson (Cardiff) | Donald Forrester (Luton); | Fiona Measham (Lancaster); |
Asking the right questions in the right way:
re-evaluating alcohol research and treatment
Advance notification: 2009 NDSAG’s Annual International Conference.
This year the annual NDSAG conference is held in
To celebrate our first event in
Following international studies that found no apparent differences between treatments, NDSAG takes up the issue of Asking the right questions in the right way challenging traditional research. We will examine the relationship between research design and real world change processes. It is time to take a realistic, long term view on treatment effectiveness and consider service users’ views.
As ever, the New Directions in the Study of Alcohol Group conference programme is designed for practitioners, managers, researchers, commissioners and anyone else interested in the alcohol field. This year’s conference in
Confirmed presenters include:
Jim Orford (
and
You can download PDFs of the conference programme and the booking form.
In the case of any queries please contact:
carol.driver@actiononaddiction.org.uk +44 (0) 141 548 4507
The full conference programme will be available and updated on the NDSAG website:
Asking the right questions in the right way:
re-evaluating alcohol research and treatment
(NOTE THAT SPEAKERS ETC ARE SUBJECT TO CONFIRMATION)
NDSAG CONFERENCE PROGRAMME 23–26 APRIL 2009
Stranmillis College, Belfast
Thursday 23 April 2009
13.30 ARRIVAL AND REGISTRATION
Conference Opening Session: Chair: Robin Davidson
Welcome to
14.00 NDSAG Chair’s Welcome & Introduction: Alex Copello
14.05 Introduction to the Conference: Robin Davidson
14.15 Opening Presentation
University,
presentation – placing our conference in the local context
15.30 Tea & Biscuits Break
16.15 New Directions for the New Directions Group: Doug Cameron &
views from the past … Ron McKechnie
Doug & Ron are two of the founding members of NDSAG
17.00 Alcohol interventions: a personal view Nick Heather
Nick is President of NDSAG
17.45 Conference announcements: Alex Copello
18.45 Conference Reception
The first evening reception is a traditional feature of the New Directions annual conference. The event is designed to welcome all delegates, including those who have been regular members of New Directions and particularly those attending for the first time. Complementary pre-dinner drinks (alcoholic and non-alcoholic) are available.The emphasis is on meeting informally with as many of the other delegates, including established members, committee members and speakers, early in the conference. New Directions has always sought to promote active participation, because this improves our experience of the conference and helps develop personal, professional networks.
Friday 24 April 2009
Friday Morning Session:
Chair:
9.00 Asking the right questions in the right way Jim Orford
Keynote conference presentation: Jim develops his
thesis – first published in Addiction 2008
10.00 A complementary perspective: mutual aid
The experience of self help movements
11.00 Coffee & Biscuits Break
11.30 Learning from one another Tim Leighton
The effectiveness of group interventions
12.00 UKATT – beyond the outcomes Alex Copello
Qualitative processes in the
Alcohol Treatment Trial
12.30 Evidence based decision making in alcohol treatment Gillian Tober
Implementing proven methodologies and practise
13.00 Lunch
Friday Afternoon Session:
14.00 Asking the right questions Pip Mason
Participative exercise. Facilitated working groups to
develop the keynote presentations and assess their
implications for real world practise
15.30 Tea & Biscuits Break
16.00 Meaningful Outcome Measures
Reflections: responding to the ‘right questions’ challenges.
Theory & treatment delivery and the impact of treatment.
18.15 NDSAG AGM
19.00 Dinner
Saturday 25th April 2008
Saturday Morning Session:
Alcohol Education Research Council (AERC) Symposium: Ray Hodgson
Contemporary reports on the Night-time Economy from AERC supported research:
9.00 The AERC & high impact cutting edge research Ray Hodgson
9.15
Dr Simon Moore
9.45 From Lose - Lose to Win - Win:The
10.45 AERC session Review Ray Hodgson
11.00 Coffee & Biscuits Break
11.30 The
Learning from a major international genetics trial
12.00 Title & speaker to be confirmed To be confirmed
12.30 AA – a very Irish organisation Shane Butler
A perspective from the Irish republic
13.00 Lunch
14.00 Saturday Afternoon -
Conference delegates identify and pursue individual learning objectives in collaboration with colleagues with facilitation and support from the conference organisers as required.
19.00 Dinner
20.30 Evening Entertainment
A Social Event for All Delegates
Sunday 26th April 2008
Sunday Morning Session:
9.30 The addiction to myth John Davies
Déjà vu and tautology all over again
10.00 Applying the drugs agenda to alcohol…… David Best
Heresy – does drugs research have anything to offer
10.30 Naughty but NICE Eileen Kaner
Don’t blame the messenger – developing good guidelines
11.30 Coffee & Biscuits Break
12.00 MATCH vs UKATT Robin Davidson &
Advance peek at a forthcoming comparison study Nick Heather
12.20 Planning the New Directions Conference 2010
Traditional end to a NDSAG conference: a planning session and wish list to inform the organisation of the next conference, which in 2010 will be held in
13.00 Conference Closes
The New Directions in the Study of Alcohol Group (NDSAG) has provided a safe environment where alcohol practitioners, researchers & service managers have explored and debated contemporary challenges in the field since the mid 1970s. Our 2009 conference theme was launched by Jim Orford in 2008. Rather than researching techniques and treatment technologies researchers should examine how treatment interacts with change processes. An inclusive paradigm would consider change over realistic (longer) time scales paying due heed to service users’ experiences and require alcohol treatment research to connect with modern, wider scientific theory. For 2009 we are also delighted to feature an AERC research symposium. We welcome new and returning members & delegates to the NDSAG 2009 conference in New Directions in the Study of Alcohol Group: Charity No: 281393 |
You can download PDFs of the conference programme and booking form.
NDSAG reserves the right to amend the conference programme as opportunities and circumstances permit and require. For conference booking details and further information please contact the 2009 NDSAG Conference Secretary Carol Driver
carol.driver@actiononaddiction.org.uk +44 (0) 141 548 4507
or visit our website: newdirections.org.uk
You’re Not Listening To Me!
communication, effectiveness & appropriate delivery service users, practitioners & management
NEW DIRECTIONS in the STUDY of ALCOHOL GROUP JOURNAL
The NDSAG conference represents a wide range of thinking on subjects related to alcohol. Speakers bring individual experience and scientific anecdote from a diversity of alcohol agencies - social, health and academic – not forgetting the personal. The NDSAG journal seeks to publish some key presentations that show the range, but also which can be as thought-provoking on paper as they can in attendance.
This preview condenses the essence of NDSAG by introducing the papers with key paragraphs, just to give an illustration of how the themes are explored.
For more information, check our website ndsag.blogspot.com and if you are interested in purchasing copies of our Journal, please contact Adrian Brown, Ade.Brown@nhs.net
Street Encounters (Douglas Cameron, Leicester)
“An advantage of living and working clinically in the same place for a long time, in my case for more than thirty years, is that one bumps into ‘ex-customers’ on the street from time to time. It is surprising how little information one requires to be able to recall even substantial case histories. So the answer to an informal question like “How are you doing?” often provides enough cues for one to engage in a perfectly meaningful but brief follow-up interview.
“At this totally anecdotal level, there seem to be four kinds of responses worth mentioning. These are:
“Most people will be familiar with the 15th Century English Proverb: “Children should be seen and not heard”, and we probably like to think that we have come a long way since then, welcoming the presence of children in our lives and wanting them to feel cared for and valued in our adult-centric world. This paper is going to explore this a little and see if, in reality, we pay attention to children, listening to and hearing what they have to say. I will suggest that perhaps things might not have changed that much over the years, and that we are actually quite ambivalent when it comes to really seeing and hearing children. I will also offer some thoughts about why this might be, and what happens when we choose to ignore children. Conversely, I will say something about what happens when we listen to children and offer some ideas about how we can become more attentive to children and young people.”
“Expensive and elaborate studies such as Project Match (l997) and the United Kingdom Alcohol Treatment Trial (UKATT 2004), reveal little significant difference in the effectiveness of competing treatment approaches yet also reveal the powerful impact of the therapeutic alliance in determining the quality of outcome. Estimates as to the effect size of the alliance upon outcome tend to range about l0% to 50% with this effect being almost certainly more pronounced in those clients who manifest with initial low self-efficacy. Even at the lower margins of this range, we are talking of an effect which far exceeds anything one expects to find when comparing one treatment approach or model with another.”
Turning points, values and narrative identities (Anja Koski-Jannes,
“Constructing stories is something fundamentally human. It is something that we do naturally day by day, hour by hour without much conscious effort. Stories help us understand our experiences and ourselves and to find meaning for our lives. Meanings do not exist as entities in themselves. We create meanings by seeing events or things in their connection with other things. Stories provide a way to build these connections between events taking place over time.
“Since the main focus of this presentation is on narrative identity and its role in desistance from addictive behaviours, I will use the data from this study to draw attention to two essential elements of this change process. One of these elements concerns turning point experiences and their role in making a personal commitment to change and the second deals with the change of values supporting the new sober identity.”
“The model has been developed with reference to a number of contexts. It is something which I sometimes use to aid my teaching and training work with generic staff and in particular social workers and social work students. It is the response of a social worker, with a belief in radical social work theoretical constructs, to a decade plus of working in a field dominated by medical and psychotherapy approaches and increasingly, short term criminal and health outcome focused commissioning processes. Finally, it reflects some of my own understanding as a drinker.”
“We know from many years of research that the most important ingredient in achieving good outcomes is that the client felt heard. In order for them to feel heard it is essential that we paraphrase their story with their emphasis so that they know we heard what was said and understood it. If there are competing narratives within their story we should draw attention to these gently to establish to which the greatest weight is being given. Further into our relationship with the client we may wish to challenge some aspect of their story. This should be done in a tentative fashion so that any misunderstandings have the opportunity of being cleared up. Having one’s story heard and validated by being taken seriously has an essential role in establishing a therapeutic alliance. This is a form of acceptance.”