Full of Empty Promises?: Exploring What Drug Use Achieves for the Individual - Jane Graham - Books - LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing - 9783848422104 - August 8, 2012
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Full of Empty Promises?: Exploring What Drug Use Achieves for the Individual

Jane Graham

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Full of Empty Promises?: Exploring What Drug Use Achieves for the Individual

Research into drug using behaviour has often focused on developing theories to explain why individuals use drugs, yet directly asking an individual why they participate in this behaviour does not necessarily uncover their motivations, or usefully inform strategies which may lead to behavioural change. Khantzian?s theory of self-medication is used to help structure a cross-disciplinary literature search across biopsychosocial domains and also the spiritual domain, for which there is a paucity of empirical research. 12 in-depth case studies are informed by the Biographical Narrative Interpretive Method. There is twin-track analysis of the data employing BNIM panel analysis and Grounded Theory techniques. Findings suggest drugs are used to achieve homeostatic balance in the biopsychosocial domains. Experiences of emptiness also arose in the data. Exploration of these revealed two distinct types of emptiness: ?deficient? emptiness and a perceived ?spiritual? emptiness. Evidence suggests that drug use can be considered as an attempt to ?self-medicate? against the state of deficient emptiness in order to achieve a ?spiritual homeostasis?.

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released August 8, 2012
ISBN13 9783848422104
Publishers LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing
Pages 396
Dimensions 150 × 25 × 226 mm   ·   662 g
Language English  

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