对积极心理学日记干预进行随机可行性研究,以支持药物使用障碍的康复。

Amy R. Krentzman , Susanne S. Hoeppner , Bettina B. Hoeppner , Nancy P. Barnett
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:处于早期康复期的个体面临着巨大的生物-心理-社会压力,导致负面情绪占主导地位。需要采取新的干预措施来改善情绪和幸福感,以支持康复。积极康复札记(PRJ)结合了积极心理学、行为激活和札记的元素,强调正在发生的正确事情,鼓励采取符合个人价值观的积极小步骤,使康复生活更有价值,从而更有强化作用。我们的目标是确定 PRJ 的可行性、可接受性以及对一系列基于优势的、多维度的康复影响,包括对生活的满意度、对康复的幸福感以及对戒酒的承诺:该研究将接受药物滥用障碍治疗的成年人(81 人)随机分为 PRJ 和对照组。接受 PRJ 治疗的人被要求每天练习 PRJ,并完成为期四周的在线调查;对照组的人则完成为期四周的在线调查。我们使用多层次模型来确定可行性和可接受性结果的截距和斜率,并比较治疗组和对照组在基线和第 2、4、8 周的康复指标差异。我们对每个康复指标进行了意向治疗和按协议分析:参与者中 53% 为女性,26% 为黑人、土著人和有色人种 (BIPOC),平均年龄为 39 岁。PRJ 参与者参加了 71% 的小组活动,完成了 56% 的每日 PRJ 记录。治疗组和对照组认为他们的学习任务(治疗组的 PRJ 和对照组的调查)同样简单;但 PRJ 组认为 PRJ 更令人满意、更有帮助、更令人愉快。治疗组和对照组在任何恢复指标上都没有明显差异。在事后分析中,我们发现对于那些有讨论的人来说,PRJ 对他们的康复有积极的影响:结果表明 PRJ 对处于最早康复期的人群的多项康复指标有积极影响。将 PRJ 纳入康复者的支持服务中
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A randomized feasibility study of a positive psychology journaling intervention to support recovery from substance-use disorders

Background

Individuals in early recovery face significant biopsychosocial stressors causing a preponderance of negative affect. Novel interventions are needed to improve mood and well-being to support recovery. Positive Recovery Journaling (PRJ) combines elements of positive psychology, behavioral activation, and journaling to emphasize what is going right and to encourage small, positive steps that align with an individual's values to make life in recovery more rewarding and therefore more reinforcing. Our objective was to determine PRJ's feasibility, acceptability, and impact on a set of strengths-based, multidimensional aspects of recovery, including satisfaction with life, happiness with recovery, and commitment to sobriety.

Methods

The study randomized adults in substance-use disorder treatment (N = 81) to PRJ or control. Those in PRJ were asked to practice PRJ daily and complete online surveys for four weeks; those in the control group completed online surveys for four weeks. We used multi-level modelling to determine intercept and slope for feasibility and acceptability outcomes as well as to compare differences in recovery indicators between treatment and control at baseline and Weeks 2, 4, and 8. We conducted intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses for each recovery indicator.

Results

Participants were 53 % female, and 26 % Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC) and mean age of 39 years. PRJ participants attended 71 % of groups and completed 56 % of the daily PRJ entries. Treatment and control groups rated their study tasks (PRJ for the treatment group, surveys for the control group) as equally easy; however, the PRJ group rated PRJ as significantly more satisfying, helpful, and pleasant. Treatment and control were not significantly different on any recovery indicator. In post hoc analyses, we found that for those with <90 days sobriety at baseline (51 %), PRJ had a statistically significant beneficial effect for satisfaction with life, happiness with recovery, and numerous secondary recovery indicators.

Discussion

Results suggest a positive impact of PRJ on numerous recovery indices for those in earliest recovery. Integrating PRJ into support services among those with <90 days sobriety could reinforce what is going well in recovery to encourage its continued maintenance and thereby improve treatment outcomes.

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Journal of substance use and addiction treatment
Journal of substance use and addiction treatment Biological Psychiatry, Neuroscience (General), Psychiatry and Mental Health, Psychology (General)
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