Social support avail ability, psychological distress symptoms and level of motivation affecting Thai addicts' self-esteem as moderated by their hierarchical position in an institutional therapeutic community rehab model

au.link.externalLink [Full Text] (http://www.assumptionjournal.au.edu/index.php/Scholar/article/view/4941/3358)
dc.contributor.author Gramling, John Ralph Cotton
dc.contributor.author Johnson, Donald Arthur
dc.date.accessioned 2022-03-21T01:42:13Z
dc.date.available 2022-03-21T01:42:13Z
dc.date.issued 2022
dc.description.abstract A prominent drug and alcohol rehabilitation method worldwide is the Therapeutic Community (TC), which employs a hierarchal system to promote member addicts to leadership positions. All addicts begin the TC program at the bottom of this hierarchy and move up the ladder throughout their stay. Some eventually become work leaders and mentors for the newer members of the addict community. However, with shorter rehabilitation durations, member addicts often finish the program without having experienced the top tiers of the hierarchy.Although research is abundant regarding relapse of TC community members, there is little on the self-esteem of these patients resulting from poor social support, the presence of psychological distress symptoms, poor motivation, and poor hierarchy positions. The current study attempted to examine why some addicts were leaving the program with low self-esteem, hypothesizing that perceived social support, achievement motivation, and psychological distress symptoms all play a role. This relationship is moderated by the patients’ position in the social hierarchy.Findings suggest that perceived social support and psychological distress symptoms (specifically depression and hostility) significantly affected patient self-esteem upon exiting the community. Still, social hierarchy did not play a role in moderating this relationship, nor was it a significant predictor of self-esteem. Further research could benefit from a longitudinal study that monitors self-esteem at multiple patient rehabilitation intervals.
dc.format.extent 27 pages
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.identifier.citation Scholar: Human Sciences 14, 1 (January-June 2022), 111-137
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.au.edu/handle/6623004553/25247
dc.language.iso eng
dc.publisher Bangkok : Assumption University Press
dc.rights This work is protected by copyright. Reproduction or distribution of the work in any format is prohibited without written permission of the copyright owner.
dc.rights.holder Assumption University
dc.subject Therapeutic community
dc.subject Hierarchy
dc.subject Social support
dc.subject Motivation
dc.subject Psychological distress symptoms
dc.subject Self-esteem
dc.subject.other Scholar: -- Human Sciences
dc.subject.other Scholar: -- Human Sciences -- 2022
dc.title Social support avail ability, psychological distress symptoms and level of motivation affecting Thai addicts' self-esteem as moderated by their hierarchical position in an institutional therapeutic community rehab model
dc.type Text
mods.genre Journal Article
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