1. Religious Fundamentalism, Humor, and Treatment Outcomes in Individuals in Court-Mandated Substance Abuse Outpatient Treatment.
- Author
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Holcomb, William R. and Ivey, William S.
- Subjects
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RELIGIOUS fundamentalism , *WIT & humor -- Psychological aspects , *PSYCHOLOGICAL well-being , *PSYCHOLOGY of drug abuse , *EXPLORATORY factor analysis , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The relationship between religious fundamentalism, humor, and psychological well-being was examined with a sample of individuals (n=109) being treated for drug abuse in a court-mandated AA outpatient program. Three separate factors of religious fundamentalism were found through exploratory factor analysis of the Revised Religious Fundamentalism Scale, and these were named Righteous-Evil Worldview, True Religion, and Scriptural Literalism. Psychological well-being of individuals in court-mandated outpatient substance abuse treatment was found to be correlated with high levels of humor but not religious fundamentalism. Psychological well-being and humor were found to be related to satisfaction with services; no relationship was found between religious fundamentalism and satisfaction with services. One factor of religious fundamentalism, Scriptural Literalism, was found to be associated with high levels of depression and paranoia/hostility. Implications of these relationships for treatment and understanding of religious fundamentalism and psychological well-being are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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