Psychiatric Bulletin (2004) 28: 470-471. doi: 10.1192/pb.28.12.470-a
© 2004 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Psychiatric Bulletin (2004) 28: 470-471
© 2004 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Cognitive-Behavioural Integrated Treatment (C-BIT)
Hermine L. Graham
Tom Carnwath
Clinical Director, Pierremont Unit, Darlington Memorial Hospital,
Hollyhurst Road, Darlington DL3 6HX
Chichester: John Wiley, 2004, 318 pp., £24.95 pb, ISBN: 0 470 85438
3
C-BIT sounds like an item from a DIY catalogue; appropriately so, because
it is a type of multi-purpose tool, but one designed for the psychological
treatment of patients suffering from both mental illness and problematic
substance misuse. It has add-on attachments for every circumstance, whether
the identified problems lie with anger control or personal finances. The full
range of functions that C-BIT encompasses will probably only be used by
specialist therapists in assertive outreach and dual diagnosis teams. However,
C-BIT training has been shown (in research reported elsewhere) as helpful to
ordinary members of both mental health and substance misuse teams. None of the
treatment methods are original in themselves, but this is an excellent guide
to how they can be tied together in a coherent system, and how they can be
matched to the various phases of treatment, which are themselves determined by
the patients current levels of motivation and readiness to change.
Addiction therapy has become in general alarmingly depsychologised. This
has been due to such factors as the slow death of treatment for alcohol
dependence in the UK, the predilection of commissioners for ultra-brief
interventions and the rise of methadone substitution as a general answer to
drug addiction. Psychologists who remain active in this field are rare, to be
cherished, and for some reason predominantly based in Birmingham, where this
publication originates.
The manual demonstrates how approaches towards mental illness and
addictions have begun to converge recently after drifting apart. In both
fields now staff are geared up for the long haul. Schizophrenia is not cured
in six sessions, but then neither is serious opiate, alcohol nor cocaine
addition. Relapse management and motivational interviewing are the bread and
butter of addiction treatment, but are also well suited to helping people
avoid psychotic episodes. Addiction workers are learning to use cognitive
techniques to tackle the depression and anxiety that so often underlie
excessive consumption. Both services are coming to understand that
responsibility for motivation lies as much with themselves as with their
patients. Ending with a brief review of the literature, the authors claim that
there is a solid basis for optimism concerning the effectiveness
of integrated treatment. This book will have achieved much if it can help
reduce the pessimism that is too frequently expressed in the context of
dual diagnosis. Even when treating people who appear at first
completely wayward, a patient and collaborative approach can in the end be
immensely rewarding.