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Evidence for a common dissociative-like reaction among addicts

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Abstract

A questionnaire was designed to test selected aspects of the author's General Theory of Addictions (Jacobs, 1982). Data were collected from groups of compulsive gamblers, alcoholics, and compulsive overeaters, and compared with the responses to the same questionnaire obtained from normative samples of adolescents and adults. The more inclusive term, “compulsive gambler,” has been used throughout, since the sample of gamblers in this study included an inpatient subgroup who had been diagnosed as “pathological gamblers,” as well as a subgroup of Gamblers Anonymous members who had not been clinically evaluated. Findings support the author's theoretical position that, when indulging, different kinds of addicts will tend to share a common set of dissociativelike experiences that differentiate them from nonaddicts. This has been termed a “state of altered identity.”

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Jacobs, D.F. Evidence for a common dissociative-like reaction among addicts. J Gambling Stud 4, 27–37 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01043526

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