饮酒时的感恩,恢复时的感恩:一项酒精使用障碍的研究。

Amy R Krentzman, Michael T M Finn
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引用次数: 3

摘要

背景:几十年来,研究人员一直在争论那些被诊断为酒精使用障碍的人是否可以重新开始无问题的饮酒。现在,康复研究人员在衡量病理学的同时,也在衡量幸福感的各个方面,得出了令人惊讶的发现,这些发现加剧了这场辩论。最近的研究表明,一些有酒精使用障碍的人继续饮酒,表明他们的积极心理社会功能水平很高。目的:利用感恩特质作为健康的标志来回答以下问题:在随访中继续饮酒但高度感恩的个体与基线时的同龄人有何不同?对于戒酒的匿名戒酒会(AA)成员和积极饮酒的非匿名戒酒会成员来说,感恩特质与人口学、社会心理和临床因素的关联是否不同?方法:在一项自然主义的纵向研究中,对275名酒精依赖者进行了2.5-3年的随访评估。在基线和随访时对样本进行社会心理和临床指标评估。结果:与基线水平的同龄人相比,高度感恩的饮酒者具有更高的社会经济地位,更高水平的积极精神,更稳定的人格指标,更少的成瘾严重程度,更少的负面生活事件和更少的精神症状。与清醒的匿名戒酒会成员相比,积极饮酒的非匿名戒酒会成员的感恩特质与受教育年限、收入和生活目标呈正相关。对于嗜酒者互诫协会的成员来说,感激之情与嗜酒者互诫协会的参与程度和清醒时间长短相关。讨论:在多个领域,尽管符合酒精依赖的标准,但饮酒者的一小部分报告表现相对较好。特质感恩与其他构念的相关性不同,表明对康复的感恩可能是情境敏感的,在AA结构内和非AA结构外的运作方式不同。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

GRATITUDE WHILE DRINKING, GRATITUDE WHILE RECOVERING: A STUDY OF ALCOHOL USE DISORDERS.

GRATITUDE WHILE DRINKING, GRATITUDE WHILE RECOVERING: A STUDY OF ALCOHOL USE DISORDERS.

Background: For decades researchers have debated whether those diagnosed with alcohol use disorders can return to non-problematic drinking. Now, recovery researchers are measuring aspects of wellbeing in addition to aspects of pathology, producing surprising findings that have added to the debate. Recent studies show that some with alcohol use disorders who continue to drink endorse high levels of positive psychosocial functioning.

Objectives: Employ trait gratitude as a marker of wellness to answer the following questions: how do individuals who continue to drink but endorse high gratitude at follow-up differ from peers at baseline? Does trait gratitude correlate differently with demographic, psychosocial, and clinical factors for abstinent members of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) versus actively drinking non-AAs?

Methods: 275 individuals with alcohol dependence were assessed for trait gratitude at 2.5-3-year follow-up in a naturalistic, longitudinal study. The sample was assessed on psychosocial and clinical indicators at baseline and follow-up.

Results: Drinkers who endorsed high gratitude had higher socioeconomic status, greater levels of positive spirituality, more stable personality indicators, less addiction severity, fewer negative life events, and fewer psychiatric symptoms than their peers at baseline. For actively drinking non-AAs, trait gratitude correlated differently, and positively, with years of education, income, and purpose in life compared with sober AA members. For AA members, gratitude correlated with AA involvement and length of sobriety.

Discussion: Across multiple domains, a subset of drinkers report doing relatively well despite meeting criteria for alcohol dependence. Trait gratitude correlates differently with other constructs for AAs versus non-AAs, indicating that gratitude for recovery might be contextually sensitive, operating differently within and without the structure of AA.

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