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A Climate for Change An International Summit Advancing Theory, Research, Policy & Practice in Addiction ‘A Climate for Change’ is a 2-day summit, with post-summit professional development workshops, that will inform, enliven and expand your understanding of addiction. Look back at the past. Look forward to new ideas. We have gathered some of the world’s leading experts in the field -- who have brought cutting-edge theory, science, and practice to bear on the devastating problem of addiction -- and gathered them together. The people that changed the way we think about addiction. Peter Adams Steve Allsop Alex Blaszczynski Carlo DiClemente Dennis Gray David Hodgins Harold Kalant Ian MacEwan Alan Marlatt Barbara McCrady Thomas McLellan William Miller Theresa Moyers Ann Roche Doug Sellman Howard Shaffer Constance Weisner Ted Wilkes Allan Zuckoff All in one place. For one seminal event. Plenary addresses, in-depth workshops, interactive presentations and panel discussions. With post-summit workshops featuring David Hodgins, William Miller, Theresa Moyers, and Allan Zuckoff. Groundbreaking. Provocative. Unprecedented. Counsellor, psychologist, psychiatrist, academic, social worker, mental health professional, policy maker, corrections worker...this is the event for you. Presented by the Pacific Centre for Motivation & Change New Zealand & Australia www.pacificcmc.com ADDICTION SUMMIT 10-12 July 2008 10-12 July 2008 Melbourne Australia www.pacificcmc.com - summit@pacificcmc.com

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Page 1: ADDICTION SUMMITpacificcmc.com/pdf_documents/Addictionsummitinfo.pdfA C lim a te fo r C h a n g e An International Summit Advancing Theory, Research, Policy & Practice in Addiction

A Climate for Change

An International SummitAdvancing Theory, Research, Policy & Practice in Addiction

‘A Climate for Change’ is a 2-day summit, with post-summit professional development workshops, that will inform, enliven and expand your understanding of addiction.

Look back at the past. Look forward to new

ideas.

We have gathered some of the world’s leading experts in the field -- who have brought cutting-edge theory, science, and practice to bear on the devastating problem of addiction -- and gathered them together. The people that changed the way we think about addiction.

Peter AdamsSteve Allsop

Alex BlaszczynskiCarlo DiClemente

Dennis Gray David HodginsHarold KalantIan MacEwanAlan Marlatt

Barbara McCradyThomas McLellan

William Miller Theresa Moyers

Ann RocheDoug Sellman

Howard Shaffer Constance Weisner

Ted WilkesAllan Zuckoff

All in one place. For one seminal event. Plenary addresses, in-depth workshops, interactive presentations and panel discussions.

With post-summit workshops featuring David Hodgins, William Miller, Theresa Moyers, and Allan Zuckoff.

Groundbreaking. Provocative.

Unprecedented.

Counsellor, psychologist, psychiatrist, academic, social worker, mental health professional, policy maker, corrections worker...this is the event for you.

Presented by the Pacific Centre for Motivation & Change New Zealand & Australiawww.pacificcmc.com

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10-12 July 2008 Melbourne Australiawww.pacificcmc.com - [email protected]

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10 July 2008

7:00 – 8:30 Registration and Arrival Coffee

8:30 – 8:508:50 – 9:00

Indigenous WelcomeKeynote Session Host – Theresa Moyers

9:00 – 9:45 Keynote – William MillerOn the Nature of Addiction: Beyond Brain Disease

9:45 – 10:30 Keynote – Barbara McCradyIt Takes a Village to Resolve an Addiction...And Certain Kinds of Villagers

10:30 – 11:00 Morning Tea11:00 – 11:45 Keynote – Carlo DiClemente

Searching for Mechanisms of Change in All the Wrong Places

11:45 – 12:00 Morning Summary – Theresa Moyers

12:00 – 1:00 Lunch Interactive Presentations

1:00 – 2:00 Doug Sellman Addiction: The Price We Pay for Knowing the Meaning of Life

Constance Weisner

Adolescents: The New Chronic

Population?2:00 – 3:00 Ian MacEwan

Lesbian and Gay Clients: So 1980’s. Move On!

Alex Blaszczynski

Pathological Gambling: Versace or The Emperor's

Clothes?3:00 – 3:30 Afternoon Tea3:30 – 4:15Plenary

Dennis Gray & Ted WilkesGetting Serious About the Structural Determinants of Indigenous Substance Misuse

11 July 20088:15 – 8:508:50 – 9:00

Arrival CoffeeKeynote Session: Host – Simon Adamson

9:00 – 9:45 Keynote – Howard ShafferWhen is Addiction, Addiction?

9:45 – 10:30 Keynote – Alan MarlattHarm Reduction: Moderation and Mindfulness in the Treatment of Co-existing Disorders

10:30 – 11:00 Morning Tea11:00 – 11:45 Keynote – Steve Allsop

Influencing Addiction Policy: The Risks of Swimming with the Crocodiles

11:45 – 12:00 Morning Summary – Simon Adamson12:00 – 1:00 Lunch

Interactive Presentations1:00 – 2:00 Anne Roche

Achieving Professional Practice Change: Roads to Nirvana

Peter AdamsStrategies to

Improve the Ethics of Engagement

with the Tobacco, Alcohol and

Gambling Industries

2:00 - 3:00 Harold KalantWhat Pharmacology Can't Tell Us About Addictions: Pessimistic Musings of Pharmacologist

Thomas McLellan

Addiction Treatment: A

Failing Industry with a Bright

Future3:00 – 3:30 Afternoon Tea3:30 – 4:30Plenary

Panel DiscussionMiller, DiClemente, McCrady, Allsop, WilkesFacilitator: Allan Zuckoff

4:45 – 4:50 Closing – Joel Porter

“The underlying reason for the summit is to get conceptual leaders to think outside the box, to identify important gaps in knowledge, and to suggest potentially important types or areas of research to move the field forward at a faster rate. It is a place for thoughtful and high level intellectual stimulation accompanied by enthusiastic discussion. The intent is to provoke rather than contemplate.” - Mark Sobell

A Climate for ChangeProgramme Outline

4:15 - 5:00 Panel Discussion: Adams, Marlatt, McLellan, Weisner, Shaffer Facilitator: Allan Zuckoff

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Post Summit Workshops12 July 2008 - 9:00 am - 4:00 pm

Carlo DiClementeAddiction and Change: Matching Interventions to the Process of Change

David HodginsFundamentals of Gambling Problems and their Treatment

William MillerIntroduction Motivational Interviewing: The Basics

Theresa MoyersUsing Client Language to Improve MI Practice: An Advanced Workshop for Practitioners

Allan Zuckoff Engaging the Difficult-to-Engage: Motivation, Change and Co-Existing Disorders

Workshop Cost: NZ$250.00 (gst inclusive)

Summit VenueThe Sofitel Hotel is a premier 5-star hotel situated in the heart of Melbourne. For more information on rates and location, please contact the Sofitel through their web site, www.sofitelmelbourne.com.au.

Alternatively, you can find accommodation via the internet on sites such as:

www.hotelclub.com www.asiarooms.com www.wotif.com www.ratestogo.com

RegistrationRegistrations will be processed in a first-in first-served manner. In order to insure your first choice of workshops and presentations, early registration is recommended.

A Climate for ChangeWorkshop, Venue & Registration Information

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Costs: Early Bird (before 1 March 08) - NZ$475After 1 March 2008 - NZ$550for the 2-day A Climate for Change Summit

NZ$250 for each of the 1-day post-summit workshops

Unfortunately we can not offer student rates or scholarships. All fees are in New Zealand dollars and inclusive of GST, morning teas, afternoon teas and lunches. Fees can be paid by bank cheque in New Zealand dollars, business/personal cheque (New Zealand Only) or credit card.

Registration fees are refundable, minus a processing fee of NZ$100, before 1 June 2008. After that time, no refunds will be processed, however registrations remain transferrable.

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This workshop presented by Carlo DiClemente will offer a view of the process of addiction and recovery from the perspective of the Transtheoretical Model of change. The journey into addiction and from dependence/ addiction to recovery is complicated and marked by ambivalence, false starts, problematic decision making and commitment, poor planning, and multiple and often unsuccessful attempts at change. The stages and process of change will be used to inform intervention strategies and address various aspects of prevention and treatment. We will highlight important mechanisms and determinants that can influence that process and examine motivation and the process of change looking at the various tasks and processes that seem to contribute to successful, sustained behaviour change including goal setting, decision-making, implementation planning, coping skills, and expectancies. We will also explore how setting (criminal justice, residential, outpatient, healthcare), the severity of both target and contextual problems (co-occurring mental illness), self-regulation skills, and support systems complicate the process of change and increase the need for comprehensive treatment planning.

David Hodgins provides a comprehensive workshop designed to help professionals understand and treat gambling related problems. Gambling problems are often interrelated with substance use although treatment is often typically sequential and by different agencies. This workshop

will provide clinicians with knowledge and skills for assessment and brief intervention strategies for gambling related problems. Participants will learn, via a mix of lecture-style presentation of concepts and principles and live and video taped demonstrations of strategies and techniques to:• Understand etiological and treatment models of gambling disorders• Assess gambling disorders in substance abusing individuals• Provide brief interventions for gambling problems using a motivational enhancement and cognitive-behavioural framework• Enhance client motivation to

attend gambling specific treatment when warranted

This workshop presented by William Miller is ideal for a wide range of professionals seeking an intensive introduction to Motivational Interviewing. This workshop consists of two sessions:

I. Motivational Interviewing: What It Is, Why It Works, and How to Learn It

II. Clinical Skills in Motivational Interviewing: What You May Not Know

Dr Miller incorporates a variety of didactic and experiential training techniques to introduce the latest research, thinking and core components of Motivational Interviewing.

Want to sharpen your MI skills? Recent research points toward client language as an important ingredient in motivational

interviewing. In this workshop, Theresa Moyers we will teach how to recognize self motivational statements or “change talk” from clients, especially when it occurs in a context of ambivalence or resistance. We will also explore methods to encourage both the frequency and strength of change talk. Finally, we will discuss the eight stages of learning MI, including how to combine MI with other methods and when to set it aside entirely. Participants will experience lecture, video and group exercises to learn during this workshop. Immerse yourself in a day dedicated to deepening your MI skills.

This workshop by Allan Zuckoff is open to people who have had previous exposure and practice with Motivational Interviewing, and who want to learn how to apply its principles and strategies to the challenge of engaging persons with co-existing disorders into treatment. Through a mix of lecture-style presentation, discussion, and live and videotaped demonstration, participants will learn to:• Understand the relationship between motivation for change and motivation for treatment• Conduct an “engagement interview” to strengthen commitment to treatment• Clarify the treatment agenda and engage clients into fuller participation in treatment activities• Intervene with clients at risk for dropping out of treatment prematurely

Post Summit Workshops12 July 2008

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Addiction and Change: Matching Interventions to the Process of Change

Fundamentals of Gambling Problems and Their Treatment

Introduction to Motivational Interviewing: The Basics

Using Client Language to Improve MI Practice: An Advanced Workshop for Practitioners

Engaging the Difficult-to-Engage: Motivation, Change & Co-Existing Disorders

Professional Development Points for each workshop will be applied for through the

Australian Psychological Society

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Original evidence-based research is required for consideration. Broad and diverse topics consistent with the conference theme: Advancing Theory, Research, Treatment, Policy and Practice in Addiction are encouraged.

Abstract Submission Format• A short, provocative and informative title.• The names of all authors (e.g. Porter J.1 and

Hodgins D.2), followed by their affiliations: department, institution, city, postcode, country, email. The corresponding author must be underlined. If there is more than one institution involved, authors’ names should be linked to the appropriate institutions by inserting consecutive numbers in superscript after relevant names. Please try to keep the affiliation as short as possible.

• The abstract text as a single paragraph of no more than 250 words. The text must be comprehensible to readers without seeing the poster. Abbreviations should be avoided and reference citations must not appear in the abstract.

• The mailing address, fax, phone number (including country code) and email address of the corresponding author listed below the abstract. Please include this only in the uploaded file.

Closing Date for Abstract Submission15 April 2008

Please send appropriately formatted poster abstracts to Dr David Hodgins at [email protected]

Confirmation of Acceptanceby 1 June 2008Abstracts will be assessed in the order that they are submitted. Hence, earlier submission of abstracts will result in earlier notification of presenter.

Author RegistrationFor accepted poster presentations, it is required that attending authors register for the conference. Do not send registration materials to Dr. David Hodgins. Please apply via the standard registration procedures. For those selected to present in the poster session, it is expected that one of the original authors be present at their poster during break times to discuss their work with others.

Technical Details:Instructions on the preparation of poster displays will be sent to authors upon notification of the abstract’s acceptance. If further information is required in advance of submission, please contact Dr Joel Porter at [email protected]

Call for Abstractsfor Poster Presentations

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Dr Peter AdamsPeter Adams is Associate Professor and Head of the Section of Social and Community Health within the School of Population Health at the University of Auckland. Through his research and practice as a clinical psychologist, he has specialized in addictive behaviour, violence and public health interventions for dangerous consumptions. In 1995 Dr Adams formed the Faculty’s Drug and Alcohol Research and Training Group, co-ordinating addictions research and training for students and professionals. He established the Centre for Gambling Studies in 2001, conducting research on the health impacts of gambling. His current research priorities include family impacts of addictions, brief interventions, recovery processes and public health approaches to gambling.

Dr Simon AdamsonSimon Adamson is Senior Lecturer and Director of Research at the National Addiction Centre Aotearoa New Zealand and Senior Clinical Psychologist at the Community Alcohol and Drug Service in Christchurch where he has practiced for the past 12 years. His area of research interest is in the description, identification and treatment of addictive disorders. In particular he has an interest in treatment outcome, having examined issues of treatment effectiveness, treatment efficacy, prediction of treatment outcome, and different methods of measuring outcome.

Dr Steve AllsopSteve Allsop is a psychologist and the Director and Professor of the National Drug Research Institute at Curtin University of Technology. He is currently a government appointed member of the Board of the WA Alcohol and Drug Authority and the WA Commission for Occupational Health and Safety, a member of the WA Child Death Review Committee and Chair of the Capital Cities Lord Mayors Drug Advisory Committee. He sits on the International Editorial Board of Drugs: Education and Prevention and Policy and is the Deputy Regional Editor of Addiction.

Dr Alex BlaszczynskiAlexander Blaszczynski is a clinical psychologist and Professor of Psychology at the University of Sydney and Co-Director of the University of Sydney’s Gambling Research Unit. He is recognised as a leading expert in the field of pathological gambling. He is a founding member of the Australian National Council for Problem Gambling, the National Association for Gambling Studies, and a foundation director of the Australian Institute of Gambling Studies. He is on the Advisory Board of the International Centre for the Study, Treatment and Prevention of Youth Gambling

Problems, McGill University, Canada. In addition, he is Editor of International Gambling Studies, and sits on the International Advisory Committee for the Journal of Gambling Issues.

Dr Carlo DiClementeFor over 25 years, Carlo DiClemente has contributed significantly to our understanding of the process of intentional behaviour change in health and addictive behaviours. He developed the Transtheoretical Model of behaviour change with fellow psychologist James Prochaska and has authored of numerous scientific articles, books and book chapters on motivation and behaviour change. His most recent book, Addiction and Change: How Addictions Develop and Addicted People Recover was published by Guilford Press in 2003. His is currently the Director of the Maryland Resource Center for Quitting Use and Initiation of Tobacco and continues to be engaged in research and consultation in the areas of smoking prevention and cessation, interventions for problem drinkers, mechanisms of behaviour change in alcohol and substance abuse, and prevention and treatment of addiction and other chronic health problems.

Dr Dennis GrayProfessor Dennis Gray is a Deputy Director at the National Drug Research Institute, Curtin University of Technology, where he established the Institute’s Indigenous Australian Research Program. He is a leading researcher in this area and has a long history of conducting collaborative research with Indigenous community-controlled organisations. He has published extensively on Indigenous substance misuse issues including a co-authored book Dealing with Alcohol: Indigenous Usage in Australia, New Zealand and Canada – and he has been invited to give presentations on his research in various national and international forums. His research has had demonstrable outcomes at the national, state/territory and regional/local levels, he is a member of the National Indigenous Drug and Alcohol Committee, and his research team was awarded the 2006 National Alcohol and Drug Award for Excellence in Research.

Dr David HodginsDr. David Hodgins is a psychologist and currently a Professor, Department of Psychology, and University of Calgary with an adjunct appointment with the Faculty of Medicine. Dr. Hodgins is also a practicing clinical psychologist. His research publications and clinical work are in the area of recovery from addictions. A brief treatment approach for problem gamblers involving self-help and telephone support that his team had developed has been recognized as a promising treatment by the United States Substance Abuse and Mental

Health Administration. In 2006, he received the Annual Research Award from the US National Council on Problem Gambling.

Dr Alan MarlattAlan Marlatt is Professor of Psychology and Director of the Addictive Behaviors Research Center at the University of Washington. In addition to over 200 journal articles and book chapters, he has published several books in the addictions field, including Relapse Prevention (1985; 2005), Assessment of Addictive Behaviors (1988; 2005), Harm Reduction (1998), and Brief Alcohol Screening and Intervention for College Students (BASICS): A Harm Reduction Approach (1999). Recognised for his innovation and valuable contribution to the substance use field, he has received continuous funding over the past 30 years for his research from a variety of agencies including the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the Alcoholic Beverage Medical Research Foundation, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

Dr Thomas McLellanThomas McLellan is a psychologist, Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania and the CEO of the Treatment Research Institute. Dr McLellan and his colleagues developed measurement instruments such as the Addiction Severity Index (ASI) to evaluate a wide variety of therapies, medications and interventions used in the treatment of alcohol and drug dependence. He has published more than 400 articles and chapters in addiction research and serves as the Editor in Chief of the Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment. His current research focus seeks to further our understanding of what works in treatment and how we can best transfer the findings of research into practical interventions in treatment settings.

Mr Ian MacEwanIan MacEwan is the Senior Project Manager, Matua Raki, the New Zealand addiction treatment workforce development programme. Ian has 37 years as a social worker in addiction.  His clinical experience includes working with homeless men, a hospital-based service, half-way houses, community detoxification, community treatment services in New Zealand and the United Kingdom. He has worked in treatment development for the UK’s Alcohol Concern and in New Zealand with the Alcohol Advisory Council for 14 years. Throughout, Ian has always carried a caseload, been involved in teaching, providing consultancy and supervision to national organisations such as the Police and Children Services. Ian has has 31 professional publications.

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Dr Barbara McCradyBarbara McCrady is Professor of Psychology at the University of New Mexico and the Director of the Center on Alcoholism, Substance Abuse, and Addictions (CASAA). She has focused her career on the development and testing of effective treatments for individuals with substance use disorders, designing one of the first substance abuse treatment programs based on cognitive-behavioral therapy principles and a conjoint treatment model for alcoholics and their spouses. She has also been active in bringing scientific attention to Alcoholics Anonymous, and co-edited Research on Alcoholics Anonymous: Opportunities and Alternatives with Dr William Miller. Her current research examines the specific needs of women experiencing addiction.

Dr William MillerWilliam Miller is Emeritus Distinguished Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry at the University of New Mexico. Trained as a clinical psychologist, Dr Miller’s publications include 40 books and over 400 articles and chapters. Fundamentally interested in the psychology of change, he has focused in particular on the development, testing, and dissemination of behavioural treatments for addictions. He served as principal investigator for numerous research grants and served as a consultant to many organizations including the United States Senate, the World Health Organization, the National Academy of Sciences, and the National Institutes of Health. He is particularly known for his work in developing the therapeutic intervention of Motivational Interviewing, and has had a profound impact on the way we assist individuals to achieve healthy behaviour change.

Dr Theresa MoyersDr. Theresa Moyers is Assistant Professor of Psychology at the University of New Mexico. Her research has focused on identifying active mechanisms of motivational interviewing and identifying optimal strategies for disseminating empirically-supported treatments for substance abuse. Her research, supported by the National Institute on Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse and the National Institute on Drug Abuse has resulted in over 30 scientific papers and articles. She is currently engaged in a research project to investigate the importance of client language as a causal mechanism in motivational interviewing.

Dr Ann RocheProfessor Ann Roche is Director of the National Centre for Education and Training on Addiction, at Flinders University, South Australia. She has thirty years experience in the field of public health and has worked as a

researcher, educator, and policy analyst in various public health areas and has held academic posts at the University of Sydney, the University of Newcastle and the University of Queensland. For the past 20 years her professional interests have focussed largely on alcohol and drug issues, particularly in relation to professional education, workforce development and professional practice change. She has worked as a consultant to the World Health Organization, in addition to numerous consultancies for government and non-government bodies in Australia and overseas and has acted as an adviser on a wide range of committees in the alcohol and drug field.

Dr Howard ShafferHoward Shaffer is an Associate Professor at Harvard Medical School; in addition, he is the Director of the Division on Addictions at The Cambridge Health Alliance. Dr Shaffer is a psychologist and the founding director of the Norman E. Zinberg Center for Addiction Studies at Harvard Medical School and the Department of Psychiatry at the Cambridge Hospital. Dr. Shaffer served on the National Academy of Sciences, National Research Council, Committee on the Social and Economic Impacts of Pathological Gambling. Dr. Shaffer is the current editor of the The Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, and is the past editor of The Journal of Gambling Studies and past associate editor of The Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment. Dr. Shaffer also is a member of the editorial boards for the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, Advances in Alcohol and Substance Abuse, and The Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, Sexual Addiction and Compulsivity. Dr. Shaffer has written extensively about the treatment of addictive behaviours and the nature of addiction.

Dr Doug Sellman Professor Doug Sellman is a psychiatrist and addiction medicine specialist. He has been Director of the National Addiction Centre (NAC), since a successful tender process in 1996, a Centre which has developed into the lead research and training unit within the national addiction treatment field, dedicated to improving treatment for people with addiction-related problems in Aotearoa New Zealand. Professor Sellman has a wide range of addiction-related research interests and is internationally recognized for his research on the effectiveness of motivation interviewing and the optimum treatment for people with “alcoholic depression”. His clinical work since 1994 has been primarily as consultant psychiatrist to the addiction treatment stream of the Youth Specialty Service in Christchurch, New Zealand.

Dr Constance WeisnerConnie Weisner is Professor of Psychiatry at the University of California, and has postgraduate qualifications in both public health and social work. She directs a research program addressing access, outcome, and cost effectiveness of alcohol and drug treatment at the Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente. She is a member of the International Expert Advisory Group on Alcohol and Drug Dependence of the World Health Organization. She has been heavily involved in health services policy and research, serving on numerous task forces formulating health reform efforts in the United States.

Dr Edward Wilkes Associate Professor Ted Wilkes is a Nyungar man from Western Australia whose professional background includes working for the Western Australia Museum, the Centre for Aboriginal Studies at Curtin University of Technology, and sixteen years as the Director of the Derbarl Yerrigan Health Service. He is currently employed in the Indigenous Research Program at the National Drug Research Institute, Curtin University of Technology. Professor Wilkes is a member of the Australian National Council on Drugs, is the Chair of the National Indigenous Drug and Alcohol Committee, and he provides advice and expertise to various other state, national and international committees. As an Aboriginal leader, Professor Wilkes has endeavoured to facilitate positive health and social outcomes, for the Aboriginal community, as well as the community generally.

Dr Allan Zuckoff Allan Zuckoff is a psychologist and Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. His research has focused on the application of motivational interviewing to adherence to interventions for co-existing disorders, sexual risk behavior, depression, and obsessive-compulsive disorder, and on the treatment of complicated grief in persons with substance use disorders. He is co-author of Improving Treatment Compliance: Counseling and Systems Strategies for Substance Abuse and Dual Disorders and a number of related articles and chapters, and editor of the international Motivational Interviewing Network of Trainers’ online MINT Bulletin.

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Registration Form

A Climate for Change Summit & Post-Summit WorkshopsPlease Print Clearly

Name

Title

Agency

Street Address

City

Country

Post code

Phone

Fax

E-mail

Please indicate your presentation choices below:Day 1 Interactive Presentation Choices:

Sellman OR Weisner (please circle one)MacEwan OR Blaszczynski (please circle one)

Day 2 Interactive Presentation Choices:Roche OR Adams (please circle one)Kallant OR McLellan (please circle one)

If you are registering for a Post-Summit Workshop, please indicate your choice below:

DiClemente - Addiction and Change Hodgins - Fundamentals of Gambling Problems Miller - Introduction to Motivational Interviewing Moyers - Using Client Language to Improve MI Practice: Zuckoff - Engaging the Difficult-to-Engage

____________________________________________________________________________________Registration Fees - NZ GST Inclusive Early Bird NZ$475 (registrations received prior to 1 March 08) Regular NZ$550 Post-summit workshop NZ$250.00

Payment Options Bank cheque (in New Zealand dollars) Credit Card: Visa OR MasterCard (please circle which one)

Cardholder Name:

Credit Card Number:

Expiration Date:

TOTAL AMOUT PAID: NZ$____________Note: all registrations will be processed on a first-in first-served basis for both the summit and the post-summit workshops. Should your presentation or workshop choice no longer be available, we will contact you.

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Registration forms and payment must be sent to:Pacific Centre for Motivation & Change1 Jack Street, Atherton 4883Queensland, AustraliaSecure Fax +61 (0) 7 40916491by either post or [email protected] +64 275 721115