Predicting Drinking Lapses in Alcohol Use Disorder: The Toxic Combination of Agonistic Striving and Poor Anger Regulation

2016 
Interpersonal stressors and reactions to them have long been considered important determinants of lapse/relapse following treatment for alcohol use disorder (AUD). We tested predictions from the Social Action Theory (SAT) of chronic stress that persons who often suffer stress related to Agonistic striving (i.e., seeking to control others) would experience a shorter time to alcohol lapse and have generally poorer alcohol use outcomes following admission to outpatient AUD treatment than persons who often suffer stress related to Transcendence striving (i.e., seeking to control the self) or Dissipated striving (i.e., lack of goal focus). This effect was hypothesized to be especially strong if anger regulation is relatively poor. The participants were 119 men and women admitted to AUD outpatient treatment. They completed assessment protocols at baseline and several times over the following 12 weeks. The results replicated the 3-group striving taxonomy found in previous research with nonclinical samples of ado...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    30
    References
    5
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []