Integrating Positive Psychology into Substance Use Treatments: History
Please note this is an old version of this entry, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Contributor:

Positive psychology is a rapidly expanding and recent empirical. interdisciplinary research topic (i.e., within the last 25 years). Early evidence supported that targeting positive variables (i.e., empathy or kindness) has numerous benefits, including improving health outcomes, vocational success, psychological well-being, and interpersonal connectedness. Positive Psychological Interventions (PPIs) are activities and behavioral interventions that target positive variables to promote adaptive functioning (e.g., reducing depression or promoting psychological well-being). PPIs may make excellent contributions to treating substance use, substance use disorders (SUDs), and substance use problems because the interventions can partially shift the notable negative treatment focus (e.g., avoiding the consequences of using) onto positive aspects (e.g., pursuing an ideal future). Current substance use treatment outcomes demonstrate a need for improvements (e.g., low abstinence rates and lifetime symptom remission of SUDs), and positive psychology may provide a framework for improving existing treatments. In the current paper, the author reviewed research supporting the use of PPIs in substance use treatments, provide suggestions for PPI applications, examine advantages and practical issues, outline the current limitations, and provide future directions for continuing this line of work. The author aimed to encourage researchers to advance substance use treatment improvements with positive psychology because the growing consequences from substance use (e.g., the growing frequency of accidental fatal overdose) and the variable, limited treatment outcomes, placing those who use substances in a uniquely vulnerable position.

  • positive psychology
  • positive psychological interventions
  • substances
  • substance use
  • substance use disorders
  • substance use problems
  • treatments
  • treatment modification
  • substance use treatments
  • treatment integration

Substance use treatments have a history of negatively framing of behaviors (e.g., being flawed individuals), potentially limiting people from seeking treatments and promoting stigmatizing beliefs [1][2][3][4]. Researchers are in the early stages of applying positive psychological interventions (PPIs) to the treatment of substance use disorders (SUDs) and substance use problems (SUPs; e.g., savoring interventions) [5]. This early theoretical work and empirical research shows promising effects. However, guidance and consideration of this integration of PPIs into substance use treatments remains sparse in the literature. As such, the purpose of the current work is to review the literature and provide the necessary background information that led to this integration, delineate the theoretical and empirical rationale, outline guidelines for this integration, and discuss the advantages, limitations, and future directions for this essential emerging topic.

This entry is adapted from the peer-reviewed paper 10.3390/encyclopedia3030082

References

  1. Nieweglowski, K.; Dubke, R.; Mulfinger, N.; Sheehan, L.; Corrigan, P.W. Under-standing the factor structure of the public stigma of substance use disorder. Addict. Res. Theory 2019, 27, 156–161.
  2. Stone, B.M. Positive psychology for substance use disorders: A rationale & call to action. J. Stud. Alcohol Drugs 2022, 83, 959–961.
  3. Stone, B.M. The war on drugs has unduly biased substance use research. Psychol. Rep. 2022.
  4. Yang, L.H.; Wong, L.Y.; Grivel, M.M.; Hasin, D.S. Stigma and substance use disorders. Curr. Opin. Psychiatry 2017, 30, 378–388.
  5. Bryan, M.A.; Mallik, D.; Cochran, G.; Lundahl, B. Mindfulness and savoring: A commentary on savoring strategies and their implications for addiction treatment. Subst. Use Misuse 2022, 57, 822–826.
More
This entry is offline, you can click here to edit this entry!
Video Production Service