Characteristics of students participating in collegiate recovery programs and the impact of COVID-19: an updated national longitudinal study

IF 1.9 3区 医学 Q2 SOCIAL ISSUES
Rebecca L. Smith, Thomas Bannard, Jessica McDaniel, Fazil Aliev, Austin Brown, Erica Holliday, Noel Vest, Waltrina DeFrantz-Dufor, Danielle M. Dick, Jessica McDaniel, Austin Brown, Thomas Bannard, Jason Whitney, Waltrina DeFrantz-Dufor, Matt Statman, Anne Thompson Heller, Rebecca Smith, Erica Holliday, Noel Vest
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Abstract

The goals of the present study were to describe the development of the first national longitudinal study of collegiate recovery program (CRP) students; provide an updated characterization of CRP students’ demographics, past problem severity, and current recovery-related functioning; and examine the perceived impact of COVID-19 on CRP students’ recovery. Universities and community colleges with CRPs across the United States and Ontario, Canada, were invited to partner on this project. Launched in fall 2020, three cohorts of participants were recruited. All participants who completed the baseline survey (N = 334 from 43 CRPs) were invited to complete follow-up surveys. The sample was composed of mostly undergraduate, White, cisgender women averaging 29 years old at baseline. They reported challenging backgrounds, including high levels of polysubstance use, alcohol/substance problem severity, mental health challenges, and involvement with the criminal legal system. Despite such adversity, they evidenced high levels of recovery-related functioning. Recovery capital and quality of life were high. Students reported an average of nearly four years in recovery, with most having between two and four years of abstinence from their primary substance of choice. COVID-19 represented a substantial source of stress for many, impacting some students’ abstinence and recovery-related functioning. Results generally parallel findings from the only other national study of CRP students conducted a decade ago, providing a much-needed update and novel insights into CRP students. Findings can inform our understanding of the CRP student population and can be used to tailor CRP design and service offerings to students’ backgrounds and needs.
参与大学康复计划的学生的特征和COVID-19的影响:一项最新的全国纵向研究
本研究的目的是描述第一个国家大学康复计划(CRP)学生的纵向研究的发展;提供CRP学生人口统计、过去问题严重程度和当前恢复相关功能的最新特征;并检查COVID-19对CRP学生康复的感知影响。美国和加拿大安大略省设有crp的大学和社区学院被邀请参与这个项目。该项目于2020年秋季启动,招募了三组参与者。所有完成基线调查的参与者(N = 334来自43名crp)被邀请完成随访调查。样本主要由本科、白人、顺性别女性组成,基线时平均年龄为29岁。他们报告了具有挑战性的背景,包括高水平的多种物质使用、酒精/物质问题的严重程度、精神健康挑战以及参与刑事法律体系。尽管如此,他们表现出了高水平的恢复相关功能。康复资金和生活质量高。据报告,学生们平均有近四年的康复期,其中大多数人有两到四年的时间戒掉了他们选择的主要物质。COVID-19是许多人的主要压力来源,影响了一些学生的戒断和康复相关功能。结果与十年前进行的唯一一项关于CRP学生的全国性研究结果大致相同,为CRP学生提供了急需的更新和新颖的见解。研究结果可以告知我们对CRP学生群体的了解,并可用于根据学生的背景和需求定制CRP设计和服务。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
6.90%
发文量
45
期刊介绍: Since being founded in 1993, Addiction Research and Theory has been the leading outlet for research and theoretical contributions that view addictive behaviour as arising from psychological processes within the individual and the social context in which the behaviour takes place as much as from the biological effects of the psychoactive substance or activity involved. This cross-disciplinary journal examines addictive behaviours from a variety of perspectives and methods of inquiry. Disciplines represented in the journal include Anthropology, Economics, Epidemiology, Medicine, Sociology, Psychology and History, but high quality contributions from other relevant areas will also be considered.
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