A Comparative Study of Addicts and Nonaddicts on Dysfunctional Attitudes and Coping Strategies
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Abstract
Substance Addiction is a serious physical, social, psychological, and moral disease that needs
an aid of rehabilitation. Dysfunctional attitudes are one of the major psychological factors
contributing to the onset of substance abuse. Addiction processes are being affected by
patients’ beliefs and attitudes. Persons holding negative attitudes toward life imagine
themselves caught in undesired and uncontrollable events predisposing themselves to
diseases. Different coping styles can be successful in different problematic situations. The
present investigation was conducted to examine the relationship between dysfunctional
attitudes and coping strategies. In addition to this, the research attempts to study the
difference between dysfunctional attitudes and coping strategies in addicts and non-addicts. It
was hypothesized that addicts have high dysfunctional attitudes as compared to non-addicts.
For coping strategies, another hypothesis was formulated that addicts used emotion focused
coping strategies more as compared to non-addicts and non-addicts used more of problemfocused
coping strategies as compared to addicts. In order to verify the above hypotheses a
sample of Sixty (N=60) participants, from which thirty were addicts (N=30) and thirty were
non-addicts (N=30) taken in the present study. To measure the dysfunctional attitudes and
Coping Strategies; the Dysfunctional Attitude Scale (DAS-24) by Power et.al (1994) and
Ways of Coping Questionnaire (WCQ) by Folkman and Lazarus (1988) was administered
respectively. The data were subjected to correlation, regression and ‘t’ analysis and the major
finding of the study reveals that there is the difference between the dysfunctional attitudes
and coping strategies in addicts and non-addicts and addicts hold higher dysfunctional
attitudes as compared to non-addicts.
