Publication | Open Access
Cognitive impairment influences drinking outcome by altering therapeutic mechanisms of change.
194
Citations
80
References
2006
Year
Substance UseMental HealthDrug TreatmentPsychologySubstance Use RecoveryAlcohol MisuseTherapeutic MechanismsSerious Neuropsychological ImpairmentsAddiction MedicineHealth SciencesBehavioral SciencesPsychiatryAddiction TreatmentTreatment ResponseAlcohol AbuseCognitive FunctionRehabilitationAlcohol ControlAlcohol DependenceSubstance AbuseLower Self-efficacyAddictionCognitive DysfunctionSubstance AddictionCognitive Impairment InfluencesMedicinePsychopathology
Serious neuropsychological impairments are seen in a minority of addiction treatment clients, and, theoretically, these impairments should undermine behavioral changes targeted by treatment; however, little evidence supports a direct influence of impairment on treatment response. To address this paradox, the authors used structural equation modeling and Project MATCH data (N=1,726) to examine direct, mediated, and moderated paths between cognitive impairment, therapeutic processes, and treatment outcome. Mediated relations were found, wherein impairment led to less treatment compliance, lower self-efficacy, and greater Alcoholics Anonymous Involvement, which, in turn, more proximally predicted drinking. Impairment further moderated the effect of self-efficacy, making it a poor predictor of drinking outcomes in impaired clients, thereby suggesting that impaired and unimpaired clients traverse different pathways to addiction recovery.
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