END-OF-TREATMENT SELF-EFFICACY, AFTERCARE, AND DRINKING OUTCOMES OF ALCOHOLIC MEN

Citation
Jr. Mckay et al., END-OF-TREATMENT SELF-EFFICACY, AFTERCARE, AND DRINKING OUTCOMES OF ALCOHOLIC MEN, Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research, 17(5), 1993, pp. 1078-1083
Citations number
20
Categorie Soggetti
Substance Abuse
ISSN journal
01456008
Volume
17
Issue
5
Year of publication
1993
Pages
1078 - 1083
Database
ISI
SICI code
0145-6008(1993)17:5<1078:ESAADO>2.0.ZU;2-E
Abstract
In substance abusers, low end-of-treatment self-efficacy is thought to be a predictor of increased vulnerability to relapse following treatm ent. This study is an evaluation of relationships between end-of-treat ment self-efficacy, aftercare, and drinking outcomes in a subsample of male alcoholics participating in a treatment outcome study. After com pleting Behavioral Marital Therapy (BMT), the alcoholics and their spo uses were randomly assigned to either an aftercare or a no additional treatment condition and followed up for 1 year. In subjects who receiv ed no additional treatment, low self-efficacy at the end of BMT predic ted poorer drinking outcomes, even after drinking behavior during BMT was controlled for. For subjects in the aftercare condition, self-effi cacy at the end of BMT did not predict drinking outcomes. Explanations for the results, as well as implications for models of relapse, are d iscussed.