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Volume 8, Issue 5 (Suppl)

J Addict Res Ther, an open access journal

ISSN: 2155-6105

6

th

World Congress on

August 29-31, 2017 | Prague, Czech Republic

Addiction Disorder & Addiction Therapy

Addiction Congress 2017

August 29-31, 2017

Impact of childhood trauma and resilience on clinical feature of alcohol use disorder

Ebru Aldemir, Betul Akyel

and

Hakan Coskunol

Ege University, Turkey

A

lcoholism is one of the most common psychological sequels of childhood trauma. However, some individuals develop

effective coping strategies and they succeed in some areas of life, such as social relations and work. This positive aspect

can be explained by ‘resilience’. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of childhood trauma and resilience on

clinical feature of alcohol use disorder. The study included 66 patients who were referred to Substance Abuse Research and

Treatment Center and were diagnosed with alcohol use disorder. None of the patients had comorbid axis-I psychiatric disorder.

Sociodemographic data, alcohol use characteristics were obtained. Childhood trauma (childhood trauma questionnaire),

resilience (resilience scale for adults), severity of alcohol use disorder (severity of alcohol dependence questionnaire and

Michigan alcoholism screening test) were evaluated. The mean age of the participants was 43.2±10.3. Of all the participants,

63.6% (n=42) were married, 74.2% (n=49) had a job with regular income. The onset of problematic alcohol use was at the age of

26.3±8.8, mean duration of alcohol use was 16.9±10.3 years and mean of the longest sobriety period was 9.7±22.2 months. No

correlation was found between resilience and early onset of alcohol use, problematic alcohol use and duration of sobriety. There

was no correlation between childhood trauma and severity of alcohol use disorder. There was a slight negative correlation

between severity of alcohol use disorder and subdomains of resilience [structured style (r=-0.278, p=0.02), perception of

future (r=-0.251, p=0.04)]. These results show that interventions to increase resilience may positively affect treatment process

in alcohol use disorder and reduce severity of the disorder.

Biography

Ebru Aldemir has been a Psychiatrist for eight years. She is a Lecturer and a PhD Student in Substance Addiction Programme at Ege University Institute on Drug

Abuse, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Sciences. She has published more than 15 papers in reputed journals. Her research interests are addictive disorders,

neurocognitive functions, motivational interviewing and brief psychotherapies.

ozturk.ebru2000@gmail.com

Ebru Aldemir et al., J Addict Res Ther 2017, 8:5 (Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2155-6105-C1-034