+ All Categories
Home > Documents > MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Date post: 22-Dec-2015
Category:
Upload: annabella-hicks
View: 220 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
22
MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton
Transcript
Page 1: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

MSc in Addiction StudiesExploring our attitudes toward

addictionAnna Williams and John Witton

Page 2: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Outline

• Questionnaire• Presentation with interruptions– Discussion in small groups– Discussion in the larger group

• Conclusion• Continuation…– Reading– Group result– Follow-up

Page 3: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Think to yourself

• Why is it important to understand our/others’ attitudes towards Addiction?

Page 4: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Attitudes

“Attitudes are reinforced by beliefs and often attract strong feelings which may lead to a

particular behaviour intents.”

Oppenheim (1999), page 175

Page 5: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Clinicians' expectations influence placebo analgesia

Gracely et al. (1985) Lancet

Page 6: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Attitudes towards Drug Use

1. Valued physical goods

2. Behaviour/Social Behaviour

3. Intimate Behaviour (into the body)

4. Affects thinking, feeling and behaviour

(psychoactive aspect)

Robin Room (2005) D&A Review

Page 7: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Prized/Feared

Page 8: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.
Page 9: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Social Disapproval

Page 10: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Public Attitudes A Review by Schomerus et al (2010)

• Compared to other mental health disorders, Alcohol Dependents are:– Less ‘mentally ill’– Responsible for their condition– As dangerous as those suffering from schizophrenia• Experimental study by Graves et al (2005): students

presented greater physiological arousal (i.e. increased heart rate) when they imagined meeting a person with a diagnostic of schizophrenia ….

Page 11: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Public Attitudes

• Preferences of the public regarding cutbacks in expenditure for patient care (Schomerus et al., 2006): • psychiatric over medical• alcoholism had least public support (personal responsibility).

• Dependents on drugs, alcohol, tabacco should receive less priority in health care (Olsen et al. 2003)• Behaviour contribute to their own illness

Page 12: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Influenced by…

• Policy– ‘War on drugs’, ‘thought on drugs’, ‘just say no’

• Representations of Drug Use and Drug Users in the British Press, 2010:– Professionals and celebrities linked to cocaine use – Young people cannabis and ecstasy users– Offenders and parents- heroin users

Page 13: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Small Groups

• What other factors influence our/others’ attitudes towards Addiction?

• What are the consequences of stigmatization to the patient?

Page 14: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

On Stigma Thornicroft et al. 2007

“The rejecting behaviour of others may bring greater disadvantage than the primary condition itself.”

Page 15: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Self-stigma

• Internalisation of negative public perception

• Self-stigma associated with:– ↓ self-efficacy (self-fulfilling prophecy)– ↓ Low self-esteem– ↑Depressive symptoms– ↑ Need of treatment– ↓ Seek help/treatment/use of health services

Page 16: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Current treatment system may stigmatise people in recovery

• The Effect of Stigma on Treatment (Luoma et al., 2007)– ↑ treatment episodes ↑ the stigma– IV users ↑ stigmatised

• Room 1980: ‘process of entering treatment is to some extent a process of extrusion from the general population, that many clients come to treatment after having exhausted their moral credit with employers and families’

Page 17: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Current treatment system may stigmatise people in recovery

• ‘Master status’

• Multiple stigmaCharlie Lloyd,

2010

Page 18: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Historically routed and difficult to

Change

Page 19: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Is stigma all that bad?

Page 20: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Larger Group Discussion

• Can prevention happen without stigmatization?

• How can negative attitudes towards addiction be change?

Page 21: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Evidence

Conclusion

Page 22: MSc in Addiction Studies Exploring our attitudes toward addiction Anna Williams and John Witton.

Reflect on your own attitudes towards addiction

READING:


Recommended