Self-Concept end Completion of Treatment for Heroin and Nonheroin Drug Abusers
- 1 January 1978
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse
- Vol. 5 (4) , 463-473
- https://doi.org/10.3109/00952997809007021
Abstract
One hundred sixty-one male veterans with a history of drug abuse were administered a battery of background questions as well as self-concept measures prior to entering a Substance Abuse Unit at the VA Hospital in Miami. Significant interaction effects were found when a 2 2 analysis of variance was run using heroin/nonheroin as one factor and completer/dropout as the other. Nonheroin drug abusers who subsequently completed treatment entered the program with the lowest self-concepts, highest ideals (with respect to the self), and were most often high school dropouts. Nonheroin drug abusers who eventually dropped out of treatment entered with relatively high self-concepts, low ideals, and were more often high school graduates. On the other hand, heroin users showed the opposite trend. Heroin users who eventually completed treatment began with higher self-concepts, lower ideals, and more education than the heroin users who became dropouts. It is suggested that a generalized feeling of optimism and motivation surrounds the completer, while the dropout seems to lack such drive.Keywords
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