Incarceration has been
described as a distressing experience, marked by important losses and
accompanied by deep existential crises. Some prisoners "hit rock
bottom" and are confronted with the fact that their life does not make
sense anymore. Surprisingly, loss of meaning among prisoners has not been
studied in a quantitative way before.
In this study, we explored the
relationship between loss of meaning inflicted by incarceration and distress.
In a sample of 365 prisoners, univariate analyses and hierarchical multiple
regression analyses confirmed that a loss of meaning positively predicted
distress in prison.
Differences between prison regimes predicted distress, but
had no influence on the loss of meaning. Unsentenced incarceration, in
contrast, did not have a direct relationship to distress, but amplified the
effect of loss of meaning on distress. Psychotherapy and chaplain support did
not affect the relationship between loss of meaning and distress during
incarceration.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/kFmzR1
By: Vanhooren S1, Leijssen M2, Dezutter J2.
- 1University of Leuven, Belgium siebrechtvanhooren@gmail.com.
- 2University of Leuven, Belgium.
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv
insight
No comments:
Post a Comment