Narratives of identity reconstruction among recovering drug dependents /

Santos, Juan Lorenzo D.

Narratives of identity reconstruction among recovering drug dependents / Juan Lorenzo D. Santos, [and three others]. - Quezon City : Psychological Association of the Philippines, 2019. - pages 209-238.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 234-238).

This study explored the recovery narratives and identity reconstruction of seven recovering Filipino drug dependents in a rehabilitation center.
Extant literature on drug abuse in the country has been limited to etiology and treatment, as well as the difficulties experienced by drug dependents
following release from the rehabilitation center. The narratives culled in this study, however, gave depth and continuity to the experiences
during rehabilitation and recovery. This study highlighted the role of Filipino values in driving the narrative forward. Using narrative analysis
and self-positioning theory, seven main plots of the recovery narrative and the respective self-positions emerged. The plot progressed from
etiology, to admission, and to recovery. Meanwhile, the positions showed participants’ transition from an addict identity to a non-addict identity,
within the rehabilitation process. Findings from this study offer new insights into drug abuse recovery as an attempt to fill the methodological
and epistemological gap in addiction studies; moreover, this research shows how the combination of narrative analysis and positioning theory
offers researchers a rigorous method that can contribute to studies that focus on identity and change, thus expanding the understanding of drug
abuse beyond pathology.

0115-3153


DRUG ABUSE.
ADDICTION RECOVERY.
NARRATIVE ANALYSIS.
POSITIONING ANALYSIS.
FILIPINO PSYCHOLOGY.

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