Thank you to all who joined Matthew Federici, Executive Director of the Copeland Center, and Judith Cook, Ph.D., for WRAP as an Evidence-Based Practice Webinar on Tuesday, January 10, 2012. The study Judith Cook lead with contributions from Mary Ellen Copeland, PhD, Carol Bailey Floyd, Walter Hudson and others contributed the main research that was accepted by SAMHSA’s Registry of Evidence-Based Programs and Practices.
The study conducted by Judith Cook at al. concluded that WRAP recipients improved more than controls from baseline to 8-month follow-up on multiple outcomes including:
- Increased hopefulness
- Increased quality of life
- Increased recovery
- Increased empowerment
New Findings have shown:
- Increased self-advocacy
- Reduced psychiatric symptoms, especially depression & anxiety
Download the Presentation: WRAP as an Evidence-Based Practice
