4.7 Article

The Strengths and Barriers Recovery Scale (SABRS): Relationships Matter in Building Strengths and Overcoming Barriers

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.663447

Keywords

addiction; recovery; connectedness; social relations; strengths; substance use disorder; barriers

Funding

  1. United Kingdom by Department of Health/National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)
  2. Scottish Government
  3. Belgium by the Belgian Science Policy (BELSPO)
  4. Research Foundation-Flanders (FWO)
  5. Netherlands by ZonMw, The Netherlands Organisation for Health Research Development

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This study reveals that being married or co-habiting during recovery is associated with greater recovery strengths and fewer barriers, as well as increased recovery capital. Having dependent children living with participants also shows similar positive associations, with a potential stronger effect for female participants. Additionally, having more people to rely on and a higher proportion of recovery peers in the social network are linked to increased recovery capital and self-reported growth.
There is a well-established relationship between isolation and both morbidity and mortality in the context of addiction recovery, yet the protective effects of intimate and familial relationships have not been adequately assessed. The current paper uses the European Life In Recovery database to assess the association between relationship status and living with dependent children on recovery capital of people in recovery from drug addiction, operationalised by the Strengths And Barriers Recovery Scale (SABRS). The study participants were drawn from the REC-PATH study and supplemented by a second sample recruited by the Recovered Users Network (RUN) across various European countries, resulting in a combined sample of 1,313 individuals completing the survey, primarily online. The results show that, in recovery, those who are married or co-habiting reported significantly greater recovery strengths and fewer barriers to recovery, and reported greater gains in recovery capital across their recovery journeys. Similar associations are found for participants who have dependent children living with them. There is also some indication that this association is stronger for female than for male participants. Finally, having more people that one can rely on and a greater proportion of people in recovery in the social network are both linked to greater recovery capital and greater self-reported growth in recovery capital. We conclude that this study provides further evidence in favour of a social cure in recovery, in which close familial ties are associated with stronger recovery resources.

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