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PUBLICATIONS

Jenkins, G. Cleveland, H., Knapp, K, Cleveland, M., & Bunce, S. (In Press) Examining the time-varying association of negative affect and covariates with craving during treatment for prescription opioid dependence with two types of mixed models. Addictive Behaviors.

Knapp, K., Brick, T., Bunce, S., Deneke, E., Cleveland, H. H. (In Press). Daily associations among craving, affect, and social interactions in the lives of patients during residential opioid use disorder treatment. Psychology of Addictive Behaviors.

 

Cleveland, H. H., Brick, T. R., Knapp, K. S. & Croff, J. (Accepted 2019). Theory and method to understand and assess how recovery from substance use disorders varies by person, time, and context.

Ashford, R. D., Brown. A., Brown, T., Callis, J., Cleveland, H.H., Eisenhart, E., et.al. (2019). Defining and Operationalizing the Phenomena of Recovery: A Working Definition from the Recovery Science Research Collaborative Addiction Research and Theory, Addiction Research & Theory, 1, 1–10. doi: 10.1080/16066359.2018.1515352

Wiebe, R. P., Cleveland, H. H., Zheng, Y., & Harris, K. (2018). Twelve steps, two factors: Coping strategies moderate the association between craving and daily 12-step use in a college recovery community. Substance Use and Misuse. doi: 10.1080/10826084.2017.1325904.

Lydon-Staley, D. M., Cleveland, H. H., Huhn, A. S., Cleveland, M. J., Harris, J., Stankoski, D., Deneke, E., Meyer, R. E., & Bunce, S. C. (2017). Daily sleep quality affects craving, partially through indirect associations with positive affect, in patients in treatment for nonmedical use of prescription drugs. Addictive Behaviors, 56, 275-282. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh. 2016.08.026

Huhn, A., Harris, J., Cleveland, H. H., Lydon, D., Stankoski, D., Cleveland, M., Deneke, E. & Bunce, S. (2016). Ecological momentary assessment of mood and craving in patients in treatment for prescription opioid dependence. Brain Research Bulletin, 123, 94–101. doi: 10.1016/j.brainresbull.2016.01.012

Substance abuse recovery in college: Building a community to support sustained abstinence (2010). Eds. H.H. Cleveland, K. S. Harris, & R. P. Wiebe. New York: Springer Press. (http://www.springer.com/us/book/9781441917669).

Wiebe, R. P., Cleveland, H. H., & Harris, K. S. (2010). The need for college recovery services. In H. H. Cleveland, R. P. Wiebe, & K. S. Harris (Eds.), Substance abuse recovery in college: Building a community to support sustained abstinence (pp. 1–8). New York: Springer Press.

Harris, K. S., Baker, A., & Cleveland, H. H. (2010). Collegiate recovery communities: What they are and how they support recovery. In H. H. Cleveland, R. P. Wiebe, & K. S. Harris (Eds.), Substance abuse recovery in college: Building a community to support sustained abstinence (pp. 9–22). New York: Springer Press.

Russell, M., Cleveland, H. H., & Wiebe. R. P. (2010). Facilitating identity development in collegiate recovery: An Eriksonian perspective. In H. H. Cleveland, R. P. Wiebe, & K. S. Harris (Eds.), Substance abuse recovery in college: Building a community to support sustained abstinence (pp. 23–36). New York: Springer Press.

Cleveland, H. H., Baker, A., & Dean. L. R. (2010). Characteristics of collegiate recovery community members. In H. H. Cleveland, R. P. Wiebe, & K. S. Harris (Eds.), Substance abuse recovery in college: Building a community to support sustained abstinence (pp. 37–56). New York: Springer Press.

Wiebe. R. P., Cleveland, H. H., & Dean, L. R. (2010). Maintaining abstinence in college: Temptations and tactics. In H. H. Cleveland, R. P. Wiebe, & K. S. Harris (Eds.), Substance abuse recovery in college: Building a community to support sustained abstinence (pp. 57–76). New York: Springer Press.

Cleveland, H. H., & Groenendyk, A. (2010). Daily lives of young adult members of a collegiate recovery community. In H. H. Cleveland, R. P. Wiebe, & K. S. Harris (Eds.), Substance abuse recovery in college: Building a community to support sustained abstinence (pp. 77–96). New York: Springer Press.

Cleveland, H. H., Wiebe. R. P. & Wiersma, J. D. (2010). How membership in the collegiate recovery community maximizes social support for abstinence and reduces risk of relapse. In H. H. Cleveland, R. P. Wiebe, & K. S. Harris (Eds.), Substance abuse recovery in college: Building a community to support sustained abstinence (pp. 97–112). New York: Springer Press.

Cleveland, H. H., & Harris, K. S. (2010). The role of coping in moderating within-day associations between negative triggers and substance use cravings: A daily diary investigation. Addictive Behaviors, 35, 60–63.

Cleveland, H. H., & Wiebe, R. (2008). Understanding the progression from adolescent marijuana use to young adult serious drug use: Gateway effect or developmental trajectory? Development and Psychopathology, 20, 615–632.

Cleveland, H. H., Harris, K. S., Baker, A., Herbert, R., & Dean, L. R. (2007). Characteristics of a collegiate recovery community: Safe haven in an abstinence hostile collegiate environment. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 33, 13–23.

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