
doi: 10.2190/de.40.3.e
pmid: 21313987
The following study, funded by the National Institute of Drug Abuse (NIDA), utilized the Addiction Belief Inventory (ABI; Luke, Ribisl, Walton, & Davidson, 2002) to examine addiction attitudes in a national sample of U.S. college/university faculty teaching addiction-specific courses ( n = 215). Results suggest that addiction educators view substance abuse as a coping mechanism rather than a moral failure, and are ambivalent about calling substance abuse or addiction a disease. Most do not support individual efficacy toward recovery, the ability to control use, or social use after treatment. Modifiers of addiction educator attitudes include level of college education; teaching experience; licensure/certification, and whether the educator is an addiction researcher. Study implications, limitations, and directions for future research are discussed.
Adult, Male, Adolescent, Substance-Related Disorders, Temperance, Morals, Surveys and Questionnaires, Adaptation, Psychological, Humans, Health Education, Aged, Motivation, Social Control, Informal, Middle Aged, Faculty, Health Surveys, Self Efficacy, United States, Attitude, Female
Adult, Male, Adolescent, Substance-Related Disorders, Temperance, Morals, Surveys and Questionnaires, Adaptation, Psychological, Humans, Health Education, Aged, Motivation, Social Control, Informal, Middle Aged, Faculty, Health Surveys, Self Efficacy, United States, Attitude, Female
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