1. Apathy is associated with poorer abstinence self-efficacy in individuals with methamphetamine dependence
- Author
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Hussain, Mariam A, Iudicello, Jennifer E, Morgan, Erin E, Kamat, Rujvi, Heaton, Robert K, Grant, Igor, and Group, the TMARC
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Methamphetamine ,Mental Health ,Substance Misuse ,Clinical Research ,Neurosciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Brain Disorders ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,& the TMARC Group ,Abstinence self-efficacy ,Apathy ,HIV ,Substance use disorder ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundConfidence in one's ability to achieve and maintain drug abstinence (i.e., abstinence self-efficacy) is a strong predictor of substance use treatment outcomes. Neurobehavioral factors that may interfere with abstinence self-efficacy are less well established, particularly in methamphetamine (METH). This study investigated whether apathy, which is highly prevalent during active METH use and periods of abstinence, influences abstinence self-efficacy among METH dependent individuals.MethodsSixty-six participants with lifetime METH dependence and METH abuse/METH dependence diagnoses within the last 18 months (mean age [SD] = 39.5 years [10.7]), and no severe psychiatric or neurological diseases, completed the Methamphetamine Self-Efficacy Scale (MSES), alongside a comprehensive neurobehavioral evaluation. The MSES presents six situations that may lead to relapse and collects self-report ratings for two subscales: "Confidence" (i.e., confidence in one's ability to abstain from using METH, or METH abstinence self-efficacy) and "Temptation" (i.e., how tempted one is to use METH) with regard to each situation. Apathy was measured using a composite T-score comprised of items and scales from three well-validated, self-report assessments.ResultsMultivariable linear regression found that higher Apathy T-scores were significantly associated with lower Confidence ratings (i.e., poorer METH abstinence self-efficacy; p
- Published
- 2021