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Hourieh Karami , Hamid Khakbaz, Faramarz Sohrabi, Farid Barati-Sedeh, Mohammad Hassan Farhadi,
Volume 14, Issue 0 (Special Issue: Addiction Researches 2014)
Abstract

Objective: The aim of the current study was to determine the effectiveness of cognitive-behavioral anger management group therapy for reducing wife abuse and increasing marital satisfaction in patients with substance abuse.

Materials & Methods: A quasi-experimental study was conducted using the pretest-posttest design. The statistical population included all men with substance abuse who were attending drug addiction treatment centers in Tehran in 2013. Twelve patients with drug abuse that showed high levels of wife abuse and their spouses were randomly selected and equally placed in the experimental (N=6) and control (N=6) groups. Data were collected using ‘Ghahari and colleagues’ Wife Abuse Inventory’ and ‘ENRICH Marital Satisfaction Scale’. Data were analyzed by T-tests and ANCOVA.

Results: Findings indicated that, compared with the control group, cognitive-behavioral group therapy for anger management significantly reduced levels of wife abuse (P<0.01) and increased marital satisfaction (P<0.05, F: 12.36) among the experimental group.

Conclusion: Cognitive-behavioral group therapy for anger management is effective in reducing wife abuse and increasing marital satisfaction in men with substance abuse.


Hamid Khakbaz, Hourieh Karami , Abdollah Shafi'e-Abadi, Morteza Malmir, Mohammad Hasan Farhadi,
Volume 14, Issue 0 (Special Issue: Addiction Researches 2014)
Abstract

Objective: The aim of this study was to determine the relationship between ‘depression, anxiety and stress’ and aggression in people with drug dependence.

Materials & Methods: An analytical study was conducted to determine correlation. In 2013, 110 individuals with drug-dependence were selected conveniently as a sample group. Data were collected using the ‘Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale’ (DASS) and the ‘Buss-Prey Aggression Questionnaire’. They were analyzed using descriptive statistics, Pearson’s correlation and multiple regression.

Results: Findings indicated significant correlations between ‘depression, anxiety and stress’ and aggression (depression & aggression r=0.828, anxiety & aggression r=0.793, stress & aggression r=0.775 P<0.0005). Depression (P<0.0005) and stress (P<0.05) showed significant predictiveness for aggression, while anxiety did not significant predictiveness (P>0.05).

Conclusion: The results showed that depression, anxiety, and stress were associated with aggression in people with drug dependence. This study suggests that addiction treatment centers and cognitive-behavior therapy clinics take into account the psychological co-morbidities present in drug-dependent individuals and attempt to treat them too.


Hamid Khakbaz, Mohammad Saeed Khanjani, Seyyed Jallal Younesi, Mohammad Reza Khodaie Ardakani, Mohammad Hadi Safi, Samaneh Hosseinzadeh,
Volume 24, Issue 1 (Spring 2023)
Abstract

Objective Schizophrenia is the most debilitating psychiatric disorder with the highest psychiatric ward admission rate. Drug therapy is the first line of treatment. However, it does not result in appropriate therapeutic responses in many patients, and they experience emotional regulation difficulties and psychosis symptoms after initial symptom resolution. Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is currently an adjuvant treatment besides drug therapy to target the persistent symptoms of psychosis. The present study aims to determine the effectiveness of CBT on the positive and negative symptoms and emotional regulation of those suffering from schizophrenia spectrum disorders.
Materials & Methods The research design was single-subject and of the AB type (baseline and intervention) with a follow-up phase. Besides the routine therapy sessions, CBT sessions were held for the study participants. They were patients admitted to Razi Educational and Therapeutic and Research Psychiatric Center in Tehran City, Iran, who were selected based on the inclusion criteria. Thirty patients were selected with convenience sampling, and 5 were randomly placed in the CBT group. They were evaluated with the scales of positive and negative symptoms of Kay, Fiszbein, and Opler (1986) and difficulties in emotional regulation by Gratz and Roemer (2004) in the baseline, intervention, and follow-up phases. The treatment sessions were planned based on the CBT protocol developed by Laura Smith, Paula Nathan, Uta juniper, Patrick Kingsep, and Louella Lim (2003). Non-overlap of all pairs (NAP), percentage of non-overlapping data (PND), percentage of all non-overlapping data (PAND), percentage of data points exceeding the median (PEM), Cohen’s d effect size, and improvement percentages were used to analyze the data, and visual graphs were used for data presentation.
Results The outcomes showed that in the intervention phase, compared to the baseline phase, the effect sizes of the positive and negative symptoms in the first to fifth participants were 1.6, 3.1, 3.2, 1.9, and 2.4, respectively. Only the effect sizes of the second and third participants were large. The effect sizes of the emotional regulation factor in the first to fifth participants were 2.8, 1.2, 1.1, 2.2, and 1.9, respectively. The effect size of the second participant was large, and the rest were average. The findings of this study showed that during the post-therapy and follow-up stages, while patients who had received CBT still experienced positive and negative symptoms of psychosis and difficulties in emotional regulation; these symptoms decreased in comparison with the baseline phase. Furthermore, their improvement percentages were not significant.
Conclusion Data analysis showed that although CBT is effective in reducing positive and negative psychotic symptoms and improving the emotional regulation of patients, the data obtained from Cohen’s d effect size and recovery indices showed that the results are not clinically significant. In other words, although the patients who received CBT showed a slight improvement in psychotic symptoms and difficulty in emotional regulation, they could not maintain the therapeutic gains in the follow-up phase.


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