There is a lack of consensus in the addiction treatment literature regarding  the definition of substance abuse "recovery".
This study utilized a  review of the literature together with a participatory research design to  construct a conceptual model of recovery from the perspectives of addiction  treatment professionals, those recovering from addictions, and researchers. 
A multidimensional, comprehensive hypothetical model consisting of  seven conceptual domains (physical, biomarker, psychological, psychiatric,  chemical dependency, family/social, and spiritual) is presented. Each domain is  operationally defined by identifying reliable and valid instruments that may be  used to measure the domain. It is proposed that the conceptual model be tested  using confirmatory factor analysis. 
If empirically supported, this  conceptual model would validate the hypothesized multidimensional nature of  recovery and provide a potential means for assessing recovery in future  treatment outcome studies. 
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