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Has CBT an Effect on Emotional Intelligence in Patients With Substance Use Disorder?

E

Egyptian Medical Syndicate

Status

Completed

Conditions

Substance Use Disorders

Treatments

Behavioral: group cognitive behavioral therapy sessions

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06310668
CBT IN substance use disorder

Details and patient eligibility

About

Aim of the study: In this study, the change in emotional intelligence will be assessed before and after group CBT sessions in male patients with substance use disorder in the inpatient department of the addiction unit at Mansoura University Hospital.

Full description

Between the ages of fifteen and sixty-four, 5% of the global population, or nearly 200 million people, reported consuming at least one illegal substance per year. According to the 2008 World Drug Report, cannabis has a prevalence of 3.8%, compared to 0.6% for amphetamines and opiates, 0.3% for cocaine and heroin, and 0.2% for ecstasy. A cross-sectional study by [1] in Egypt with 2552 participants found that sedatives (8.7%) were the most commonly abused drugs, followed by alcohol (6.7%), cannabinoids (6.6%), and tramadol (2.4%). The prevalence of drug use was 8.9% for cigarette smoking followed by sedatives (4.3%), hashish (3.6%), alcohol (2.7%), cannabinoids (1.4%,) and tramadol (1.0%).

Lander et al. [2] believed that substance use disorder (SUD) is one of the most severe psychosocial traumas posing environmental, psychological, behavioral, and emotional challenges to individuals. It can cause obstacles for persons, families, and cultural foundations, endangering countries' dynamics. SUD is a brain disorder that impacts the person's behavior, manifests as psychological and physiological symptoms; and persists for a long duration despite its harmful and detrimental consequences.

Previous research has shown that different factors impact starting and following addiction. These factors are; 1) Individuals, such as the presence or lack of personality traits that make an individual vulnerable to addiction, for example, non-assertiveness as an individual factor. 2) Social factors, such as parental addiction, lack of parental control, availability of substances, presence of addicted peers, and so on [3].

Emotional intelligence (EQ) is a relatively recent behavioral model rising to prominence with Daniel Goleman's 1995 Book called 'Emotional Intelligence'. The early emotional intelligence theory was originally developed during the 1970s and 80s by the work and writings of psychologists Howard Gardner (Harvard), Peter Salovey (Yale), and John 'Jack' Mayer (New Hampshire) [4]. Emotional intelligence consists of the ability to motivate individuals such as endurance against frustration, impulse control, mood modification, and avoiding destructive stress to prevent mental disorders [5].

Emotional intelligence is a set of non-cognitive skills and abilities that can help a person deal with environmental stressors, according to [6]. Azzam and Elghonemy's [7] research demonstrated that emotional regulation was associated with mood improvement and a higher likelihood of SUD recovery. They found emotional intelligence to be an important factor in the treatment of substance use. [8] suggested that improvements in EI through treatment interventions can be an effective way to improve not only EI but also psychiatric symptoms both for the short term and the long term after rehabilitation.

Enrollment

84 patients

Sex

Male

Ages

18 to 55 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Male patients with DSM5 diagnosis of substance use disorder
  2. Age range 18 to 55 years
  3. Agreeing to participate in the research and giving written informed consent
  4. Average IQ as evidenced by the Wechsler Adult Intelligence scale

Exclusion criteria

  1. Psychiatric comorbidities
  2. Any neurological or medical conditions interfering with the cognitive abilities

4-Illiterate patients

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

84 participants in 2 patient groups

CBT intervention arm
Experimental group
Description:
patients with substance use disorder in the inpatient department of the addiction unit in Mansoura University Hospital who will receive group CBT sessions
Treatment:
Behavioral: group cognitive behavioral therapy sessions
NON-CBT control arm
No Intervention group
Description:
age and gender-matched patients with substance use disorder in the outpatient clinics of the addiction unit in Mansoura University Hospital who will not receive group CBT sessions

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

hassan M sonbol

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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