Litcius/Paper detail

Testing a Socioecological Model of Relapse and Recovery from Alcohol Problems

Katherine J. Karriker‐Jaffe, Jane Witbrodt, Amy A. Mericle, Douglas L. Polcin, Lee Ann Kaskutas

2020Substance Abuse Research and Treatment21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study tests a socioecological model of relapse and recovery using latent class growth mixture modeling to identify neighborhood, social network and individual-level predictors of alcohol dependence trajectories among a large, longitudinal sample of problem drinkers recruited from substance use treatment settings. We identified four distinct alcohol dependence trajectories: Stable Recovery/Low (Class 1); Relapsing/Rising (Class 2); Late Recovery/Declining (Class 3); and Chronic/High (Class 4). Neighborhood context (poverty and density of bars), social network characteristics (less involvement with Alcoholics Anonymous [AA], continued affiliation with heavy drinkers), and individual predisposing (psychiatric severity) and need (returning to treatment) characteristics each distinguished individuals in the Relapsing/Rising class from individuals in the Stable Recovery/Low class. Social network characteristics (AA involvement and continued affiliation with heavy drinkers) were the primary distinguishing factors for individuals in the Chronic/High class compared to the Late Recovery/Declining class. Study findings can be used to promote recovery and help prevent relapse by: guiding development of community-level interventions to improve social and physical environments; identifying potentially modifiable factors (social network support for sobriety, participation in self-help) to reduce negative consequences among problem drinkers who remain in high-risk neighborhoods; and contributing to ongoing discussions about new and continued licensing of alcohol outlets and regulation of alcohol sales to prevent alcohol problems in high-risk areas and among high-risk people.

Topics & Concepts

SobrietyLatent class modelContext (archaeology)PsychologyPsychological interventionPovertyHealth psychologySocial network (sociolinguistics)Alcohol dependenceSocial classSocial supportPsychiatryClinical psychologyPublic healthAlcoholMedicineSocial psychologyNursingStatisticsMathematicsBiochemistryEconomicsBiologyPaleontologyLawSocial mediaPolitical scienceChemistryEconomic growthSubstance Abuse Treatment and OutcomesAlcohol Consumption and Health EffectsHomelessness and Social Issues