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The Treatment Effectiveness Assessment (TEA)

Authors Ling W , David Farabee, Liepa D, Wu L 

Received 20 May 2013

Accepted for publication 21 May 2013

Published 24 September 2013 Volume 2013:4 Pages 73—74

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/SAR.S48737

Checked for plagiarism Yes



Walter Ling,1 David Farabee,1 Dagmar Liepa,2 Li-Tzy Wu3

1Integrated Substance Abuse Programs, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, 2Valley Care Medical Center, Panorama City, CA, 3Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, School of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA

We have been surprised and gratified by the readers’ responses to our article, The Treatment Effectiveness Assessment (TEA): an efficient, patient-centered instrument for evaluating progress in recovery from addiction, which was published in December 2012.1 In the six months since that time, we have received numerous questions and observations about the article, and about the TEA instrument. Respondents were clinicians: physicians, counselors, therapists, nurses; as well as administrators and policy makers. 

View original paper by Ling W, Farabee D, Liepa D, Wu LT.
 

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