AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aims to compare factors like religious denomination, religiosity, guilt, altruism, and forgiveness between alcohol-dependent patients and healthy controls, while also looking at their relationship to the disorder's outcomes over a 24-month period post-treatment.
  • In a mainly Christian region of Germany, researchers used six questionnaires with 166 alcohol-dependent patients and 240 healthy subjects, finding that patients reported higher religious affiliation, greater feelings of guilt, and lower perceptions of altruism compared to controls.
  • Results indicated that higher religious practices and affiliations correlated with earlier and more frequent alcohol-related readmissions, while lower perceived altruism was linked to worse outcomes, highlighting these factors as potential risk indicators for alcohol dependence.

Article Abstract

Aims: To compare religious denomination, religiosity, guilt, altruism and forgiveness between alcohol-dependent patients and healthy control subjects and to prospectively investigate their relationship to the disorder's 24-month course following in-patient withdrawal treatment.

Method: This study in Franconia (a mainly Christian protestant region of southern Germany) applied six questionnaires to evaluate religiosity, guilt, altruism and forgiveness in 166 alcohol-dependent in-patients during withdrawal and compared findings with that of 240 healthy controls.

Results: Compared to controls religious denomination was more frequently reported by the patients (OR = 1.72, P = 0.014) and patients showed higher guilt (P < 0.001). The subjective attainability of altruism was lower in patients than in controls (P = 0.015). Higher scores on scale of inter-religious private practice predicted earlier (Rho = -0.184, P = 0.021) and more frequent alcohol-related readmissions during the follow-up (Rho = 0.207, P = 0.009). Higher religious affiliation was related to earlier (Rho = -0.214, P = 0.008) and more frequent alcohol-related readmissions (Rho = 0189, P = 0.020). Lower values of subjective attainability of altruism predicted a worse outcome (earlier [Rho = 0.231, P = 0.003] and more frequent readmissions [Rho = -0.223, P = 0.004]). The sex-specific analyses show that some of the associations are stronger in women and others are stronger in men; however, these gender differences are small and possibly biased by multiple hypothesis testing.

Conclusions: We identified religious denomination, private religious practice, religious affiliation, guilt and reduced attainability of altruism as risk factors for alcohol dependence and a worse follow-up outcome. Our findings may help to establish future preventive and therapeutic strategies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/alcalc/agy026DOI Listing

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