Spelling suggestions: "subject:"substance"" "subject:"ubstance""
131 |
Assessing the Clinical Experiences and Attitudes of Play Therapists Working with Children of Parental Substance UseYurkovich, Chelsea V 12 1900 (has links)
This study aimed to gain insight into the clinical practices and attitudes of currently practicing play therapists working with children with a parent with a substance use disorder. Participants in the study were play therapists credentialed by the Association for Play Therapy, either as a Registered Play Therapist™ or Registered Play Therapist-Supervisor™. A total of 198 play therapists participated in the study. Results demonstrated that variables including prior education, caseload of children affected by parental substance use, and the number of years since obtaining a mental health licensure explained 16% of the variance in participant attitude scores on the Drug and Drug Problems Perceptions Questionnaire (DDPPQ). Specifically, education (β = -.335, rs2 = .884, p < .001) was found to be a significant predictor of play therapist attitudes towards substance users as it explained 88% of the variance accounted for in the effect. Additionally, although not found to be significant, caseload (β = -.134, rs2 = .325, p = .058) was found to explain 33% of the variance accounted for in the effect. This initial exploration of play therapists' attitudes towards substance users provides strong evidence towards the importance of education and training in substance use disorders. Further exploration of play therapists' educational backgrounds in substance use and clinical experiences of working with children affected by parental substance use.
|
132 |
Evaluation of soil to plant transfer factors of naturally occurring radioactive materials (norms) in some vegetables / T.C MotimediMotimedi, T C January 2012 (has links)
Thesis (M.Sc.(Agric, Science and Tech) North-West University, Mafikeng Campus, 2012
|
133 |
Major life events and change in health related behavioursPatel, Purvika January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
|
134 |
The desire of the spirit : theological reflections on substance use and misuseWilliams, Hector Chandra-shekar January 2009 (has links)
This thesis is a theological reflection on substance use and misuse. René Girard’s mimetic theory of human Desire is used as a hermeneutic to explicate the formation of self in Western modernity. The role of intoxicative and hallucinogenic substances in Western culture is seen primarily as facilitating the Capitalist template of homo oeconomicus whose central tenets are individualism, autonomy and rationalism. The mind-altering quality of such substances is a means to cope with the existential angst of individualist modes of life and provides, in the milieu of social interaction, an artificial and temporary sense of connectedness with others. Humanity’s ubiquitous search for connectedness and meaning beyond itself is argued as its defining spiritual character. Consequently the addiction recovery principle of sobriety through accountability to a Higher Power – seen as a spiritual principle and practised in recovery programmes based on the twelve-step method of Alcoholics Anonymous – provides the foundation for the empirical aspects of this study. Lifestory narratives of a sample of recovering individuals reveal the spiritual roots of substance misuse as disconnection and isolation from certain significant others (such as parents), or from a normative code of early social settings (such as schools). The role of intoxicative and hallucinogenic substances in providing alternative means of connection and belonging is illustrated through the mimetic patterns in the narrative accounts which substantiate Girard’s reading of human Desire as fundamentally contingent upon the Other. In considering the implications for the Church’s praxis, Girard’s notion of nonrivalistic mimesis is elucidated as an antidote to Capitalist Desire in which the Church unwittingly participates. Hauerwas’ vision of a communal and sacrificial witness is put forward as an alternative template for the Church in its witness and offer of Christocentric relationality whose economy of Love removes the need for mindaltering substances in order to affirm one’s identity.
|
135 |
Det autobiografiska minnet relaterat till alkohol- drog missbrukHellberg, Sara January 2017 (has links)
Syftet med denna studie var att undersöka livsmålen genom ett autobiografiskt minnesperspektiv hos personer med missbruksproblematik, som deltog i en pågående behandling och som hade genomgått en avgiftning. De var drog- alkoholfria. Resultaten visade ingen skillnad i antal livsmål vare sig i det förflutna eller i framtiden inom kategorierna nära relationer, ekonomi, privatliv, emotioner/känslor, socialt liv, arbete/utbildning, hälsa och fysiskt välbefinnande. Det fanns inte heller någon skillnad i hur försöksdeltagarna hade lyckats med dessa mål. Dock fanns det skillnader i att försöksdeltagarna hade misslyckats mest med målen relaterade till nära relationer i det förflutna om man jämför med andra målkategorier. Studien visade också att försöksdeltagarna hade fler framtidsmål jämför med deras mål i det förflutna. En annan intressant aspekt som framkom i studien var att personer med missbruksproblem tenderar att komma ihåg fler negativa minnen än positiva från det förflutna. / The purpose of this study was to investigate life goals through an autobiographical memory perspective in people with addiction problems. They had already undergone detoxification and were drug- alcohol- free. No difference was shown in past and future life goals. Nor was there any difference in how the participants had succeeded in these goals. However, participants were shown to fail most with life goals related to close relationships. The study also showed that participants remembered more future than past life goals. Finally, it was shown that most of their autobiographical self- grounding memories were of negative valance.
|
136 |
The Effectiveness of Substance use Measures in the Detection of Denial and Partial DenialWooley, Chelsea Nichole 05 1900 (has links)
Many substance users deny their substance use to avoid negative consequences, thus diluting the accuracy of assessment. To address this issue, indirect items are often included on substance use measures to identify those who deny their use. The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of complete denial and partial denial on substance use measures. Partial denial, also termed denial of effects, is the denial of substance use interfering in multiple domains of a person's functioning. The study used a mixed within- and between-subjects design with participants from a dual diagnosis inpatient unit. Each participant completed the study under two different conditions which include an honest condition and an experimental condition (either complete denial or partial denial). Results show that partial denial is distinctly different from complete denial across three self-report substance use measures. Importantly, substance users engaging in these denial conditions were often undetected by these measures.
|
137 |
A phenomenological study of how people with co-occurring disorders have managed to achieve a state of full recoveryHeald, Alistair 27 July 2016 (has links)
A Thesis Proposal Submitted to the Psychology Department School of Human and Community Development University of Witwatersrand in Partial Fulfilment of the Degree of Master of Arts Degree in Psychology by Dissertation.
February 2016 / This study was aimed at an in-depth exploration of the recovery experiences of a group of 12 individuals who attended 12 step self-help groups situated in different regions in Johannesburg. 12-step self-help groups are presently the largest clinical supplements in the world. Ongoing discussions with the relevant representatives from the fellowships of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) and Narcotics Anonymous (NA) were utilised in order to gain access to this population of people. These 12 individuals suffered from substance dependence and one or more co-occurring disorders (CODs) and were interviewed in semi-structured interviews about how their lives had changed since they had achieved a state of recovery and about some of the difficulties they had experienced since the point at which they had achieved remission from their substance-related disorder. The study also focused on the therapeutic aids that the participants had found useful during their time in recovery. In this study, CODs refers to the existence of at least one substance-related disorder and at least one psychiatric disorder in the same individual. The overarching methodological framework that was used in the study was phenomenological. It was evident from the study that the road to recovery is fraught with many challenges that the recovering individual needs to negotiate and that very often there is no information available on what the best course of action to follow is. In conclusion it is evident that recovering addicts, especially those that have been diagnosed with one or more CODs often require on going support and care if they are to continue on their journey of recovery
|
138 |
A Discursive Analysis of Addicted Users’ Accounts of Opiate AddictionSinisi, Vincenzo 26 October 2006 (has links)
Faculty of Arts
School of Humanities
9709128f
enzo@hixnet.co.za / This research report undertook an original exploration into the workings of addiction.
The theoretical insights of discursive psychology were applied to the study of opiate
addiction and were used to analyse the manner in which using and non-using
informants were able to constitute addiction through discourse. By comparing the
discursive accounts of self-defined recovered, recovering and currently addicted
users, the report highlighted how ways of speaking about substances and their use
may be implicated in the maintenance and cessation of addiction.
The transcripts of four focus groups, consisting of a total number of 15 informants,
were qualitatively analysed using a thematic method that focused on the informants’
strategic use of discourse. The analysis revealed important differences between using
and non-using informants in terms of the self employed discursive practices that they
used in constructing their experience of addiction. Differences included variations in
the attribution of agency to either the opiate or the informant and the degree to which
opiate use was presented as cause for concern or not. These and other differences
were explored in detail together with their potential implications, functions and
apparent effects on the users’ capacity to maintain abstinence as opposed to
continuing to use.
|
139 |
Cops in the Making: Substance Use Patterns and Traits of Youth Who Enter the Criminal Justice fieldJanuary 2019 (has links)
abstract: Officials employed in the criminal justice system have a duty to serve, protect, and uphold the law. Nevertheless, previous research has found problematic drinking and illegal substance use exists among criminal justice system employees. Criminal justice employees may be more likely to use substances due to strains or due to increased access to drug. On the other hand, self-selection and screening processes may result in a pool of employees who fewer substances than the general population. Using waves 1 through 17 of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997, the current research examines substance use patterns of criminal justice system employees, assessing how their rate of substance use compares to a nationally representative sample, and how their substance use changes once employed with the criminal justice system, this research surveys the alcohol and illicit drug use of people who went on to work in the criminal justice system and how their substance use compares to the general population. In addition, this research compares police officer substance use to the general population. When compared to a nationally represented sample, criminal justice system employees consistently use illegal substances at lower rates. However, the prevalence of alcohol use among police officers specifically is higher when compared to the general population and increases once employed with the criminal justice system. Information from this research can be used to help agencies with employee selection procedures and employee assistance programs for current employees. / Dissertation/Thesis / Masters Thesis Criminology and Criminal Justice 2019
|
140 |
SPIRITUALITY OF SUBSTANCE ABUSE COUNSELORSSasso, Matthew 01 June 2018 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to understand the impact of spirituality among substance abuse counselors for those who in the recovery process. The research demonstrates the effectiveness of how personal beliefs of substance abuse counselors influence the treatment experience. This study uses a qualitative post positivist paradigm to study the impact of practitioners’ personal beliefs towards spirituality in the treatment of clients. It addresses essential factors from a spiritual and religious framework and reveals the consideration of personal beliefs of substance abuse counselors and its impact on the treatment experience of an individual’s recovery. The content of the research is derived from personal experience and then interpreted through reason and logic to understand the layers of spirituality and religion. The results of this analysis can be used to illustrate the impact that spirituality has within the field of substance abuse treatment.
|
Page generated in 0.0475 seconds