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Changes in Drug-Related Implicit Associations during Substance Use Disorder Treatment: The Role of the Therapeutic Context

Implicit cognition has been linked to relapse in substance use disorder (SUD). Studies on attentional bias have found different outcomes related to the therapeutic context, finding an association with relapse in inpatients but not in outpatients. There are no similar studies that use associations in...

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Published in:Substance use & misuse 2022, Vol.57 (2), p.185-192
Main Authors: Gómez-Bujedo, Jesús, Lorca-Marín, José Andrés, Pérez-Moreno, Pedro Juan, Díaz Batanero, Carmen, Fernández-Calderón, Fermín, Moraleda-Barreno, Enrique
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creator Gómez-Bujedo, Jesús
Lorca-Marín, José Andrés
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Fernández-Calderón, Fermín
Moraleda-Barreno, Enrique
description Implicit cognition has been linked to relapse in substance use disorder (SUD). Studies on attentional bias have found different outcomes related to the therapeutic context, finding an association with relapse in inpatients but not in outpatients. There are no similar studies that use associations in semantic memory as a measure of implicit cognition. (i) to analyze the relationship between a measure of associations in semantic memory and relapse in inpatients and outpatients; (ii) to compare the evolution of these associations between inpatients and outpatients after 3 months of treatment. Eighty nine outpatients and 94 inpatients with SUD for cocaine and alcohol participated in this study. We employed a longitudinal design with a baseline evaluation and follow-up after three months, using the Word Association Task for Drug Use Disorder (WAT-DUD). The choice of drug-related words predicted relapse in cocaine (odds ratio = 1.97, z = 2.01, p = .045) and alcohol-cocaine (odds ratio = 2.39, z = 2.55, p = .011) use. Follow-up at 3 months revealed a reduction in the choice of drug-related words in inpatients (Z = 2.031, p = .042). A greater choice of drug-associated words in the presence of ambiguous images was related to relapse in inpatients but not in outpatients. The inpatients group showed a reduction in the semantic association with drugs during the first three months of treatment.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Taylor and Francis:Jisc Collections:Taylor and Francis Read and Publish Agreement 2024-2025:Medical Collection (Reading list); Sociological Abstracts; SPORTDiscus with Full Text
subjects Alcohol
Ambiguity
Associative memory
Attentional bias
Cocaine
Cognition
Drug abuse
Drug addiction
Drug use
Drugs
Humans
Medical treatment
Memory
Outpatients
Recurrence
Relapse
Semantic association
Semantic memory
Semantics
Substance abuse
Substance abuse treatment
Substance use disorder
Substance-Related Disorders - therapy
Word association
title Changes in Drug-Related Implicit Associations during Substance Use Disorder Treatment: The Role of the Therapeutic Context
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