Frontiers in Psychology (Nov 2017)

Experience-Induced Change of Alcohol-Related Risk Perception in Patients with Alcohol Use Disorders

  • Sarah Klepper,
  • Michael Odenwald,
  • Susanne Rösner,
  • Smeralda Senn,
  • Hans Menning,
  • Devi Pereyra-Kröll,
  • Brigitte Rockstroh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01967
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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The role of alcohol-related risk perception for effective treatment of alcohol use disorders (AUD) is still unclear. The present study on 101 alcohol-dependent patients undergoing a 10-week AUD treatment protocol investigated the relationship between alcohol-related risk perception and alcohol use with the hypotheses that (1) risk perception changes across treatment, (2) changes vary with treatment-related experiences of abstinence/relapse indicating ‘risk reappraisal,’ and (3) adjustment of perceived own vulnerability according to ‘risk reappraisal hypothesis’ predicts abstinence during follow-up. Abstinence during treatment was related to a decrease, and relapse during treatment to a slight increase in perceived own risks. Abstinence during the 3-month follow-up varied with experience-induced risk reappraisal. The results show an impact of risk reappraisal on alcohol use and hence advocate a focus on risk reappraisal in AUD treatment.

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