Literature DB >> 10395162

An exploratory analysis of women and men within a self-help, communal-living recovery setting: a new beginning in a new house.

J R Ferrari1, L A Jason, R Nelson, M Curtin-Davis, P Marsh, B Smith.   

Abstract

In the present exploratory study, women without children (n = 13) and women with children (n = 23) were compared to men (n = 35) on demographic and self-reported variables on entering a communal-living, self-help recovery program called Oxford House. Men were more often hospitalized for their addiction than either group of women, and men and women with children were older and had been previously hospitalized longer for their addiction than women without children. There were no significant differences among groups in terms of their codependency on others, and men felt a stronger sense of camaraderie with other residents than women with or without children. Men and women with children also tended to feel they shared more in the decisions within their house than did women without children. Further, with partial correlates (controlling for the number of children), women with children indicated that the greater their self-reported codependency, the less accepting they were of their children and the more depressed they were about their parenting abilities. Dysfunctional characteristics of the children also were related to negative characteristics in the children reported by their mothers. In short, men and women with and without children entering an Oxford House have similar profiles, yet women with children have additional stressors associated with parental responsibilities.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10395162     DOI: 10.1081/ada-100101862

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse        ISSN: 0095-2990            Impact factor:   3.829


  4 in total

1.  Sense of Community within Oxford House Recovery Housing: Impact of Resident Age and Income.

Authors:  B C Graham; L A Jason; J F Ferrari
Journal:  J Groups Addict Recover       Date:  2009-01

2.  Contrasting social climates of small peer-run versus a larger staff-run substance abuse recovery setting.

Authors:  Ronald Harvey; Leonard A Jason
Journal:  Am J Community Psychol       Date:  2011-12

Review 3.  Homelessness among families, children, and adolescents: an ecological-developmental perspective.

Authors:  Mason G Haber; Paul A Toro
Journal:  Clin Child Fam Psychol Rev       Date:  2004-09

4.  The Effects of Children on the Process of Recovery in Oxford Houses.

Authors:  Ray Legler; Danielle Chiaramonte; Meaghan Patterson; Ashley Allis; Hilary Runion; Leonard Jason
Journal:  J Appl Med Sci       Date:  2012
  4 in total

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