Exploring agency, communion and narrative foreclosure in cognitive behavioural therapy for substance use disorders

Introduction: Substance use disorders (SUDs) are a significant societal concern, negatively impacting self-worth, hope, and interpersonal connectedness. SUD recovery involves a transformation of one’s ‘life-story’ or ‘narrative identity’. ‘Narrative foreclosure’ (NF) impedes this process by disconne...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mark de Lange, Job van der Palen, Hein de Haan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-12-01
Series:Addictive Behaviors Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352853225000446
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849252266620485632
author Mark de Lange
Job van der Palen
Hein de Haan
author_facet Mark de Lange
Job van der Palen
Hein de Haan
author_sort Mark de Lange
collection DOAJ
description Introduction: Substance use disorders (SUDs) are a significant societal concern, negatively impacting self-worth, hope, and interpersonal connectedness. SUD recovery involves a transformation of one’s ‘life-story’ or ‘narrative identity’. ‘Narrative foreclosure’ (NF) impedes this process by disconnecting past, present, and future narratives, hindering the rewriting of SUD-related identities. We investigate the impact of SUD-based cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) on narrative identity transformation and hypothesise NF as a potential factor in post-treatment relapse. Methods: 107 patients referred to an outpatient clinic for adults with SUDs in the Netherlands were included. Participants completed the “Agency and Communion Inventory” (translated and validated in Dutch), the Narrative Foreclosure Scale (NFS) and the “Measurement of Addiction for Triage and Evaluation” (MATE), including the Depression, Anxiety, and Stress-Scale (DASS-21). Data collection occurred at the start of treatment, post-treatment (+3 months), and during a follow-up measure (+6 months). Results: While participants showed a substantial reduction in substance use frequency and DASS-21 sum scores during CBT-treatment, no such differences were found in narrative themes. Multivariate models revealed that baseline communion and past-directed NF predicted ’substance-use reduction’ during treatment, while ’cannabis use,’ communion and future directed NF were predictors of ’DASS-21 sum score reduction’. Baseline communion showed a moderate positive relation to post-treatment relapse, while ’NFS: Future’ exhibited a moderate inverse relation. These findings remained robust even when altering the criteria for defining ’post-treatment relapse.’ They indicate that a stronger identification with communal themes serve as a protective factor against relapse, while future directed NF is associated with higher relapse rates. Conclusion: this study provides valuable insights into the interplay between narrative themes and treatment outcome(s) in SUD recovery. Notably, our findings underscore the significance of future-directed narrative foreclosure in the recovery process and found that CBT for SUDs does not appear to significantly facilitate narrative identity transformation. These results suggest that existing addiction treatments could be enhanced through the integration of narrative-focused interventions.
format Article
id doaj-art-e596ac2fe35a47b49e13057555d9c1be
institution Kabale University
issn 2352-8532
language English
publishDate 2025-12-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Addictive Behaviors Reports
spelling doaj-art-e596ac2fe35a47b49e13057555d9c1be2025-08-20T03:56:41ZengElsevierAddictive Behaviors Reports2352-85322025-12-012210062610.1016/j.abrep.2025.100626Exploring agency, communion and narrative foreclosure in cognitive behavioural therapy for substance use disordersMark de Lange0Job van der Palen1Hein de Haan2Tactus Addiction Treatment, Deventer, The Netherlands; Present: Trajectum, Zwolle, The NetherlandsDepartment of Epidemiology, Medisch Spectrum Twente, Enschede, The Netherlands; Section Cognition, Data and Education, Faculty of Behavioural, Management and Social Sciences, University of Twente, Enschede, The Netherlands; Corresponding author at: Department of Epidemiology, Medisch Spectrum Twente, Enschede, The Netherlands.Tactus Addiction Treatment, Deventer, The NetherlandsIntroduction: Substance use disorders (SUDs) are a significant societal concern, negatively impacting self-worth, hope, and interpersonal connectedness. SUD recovery involves a transformation of one’s ‘life-story’ or ‘narrative identity’. ‘Narrative foreclosure’ (NF) impedes this process by disconnecting past, present, and future narratives, hindering the rewriting of SUD-related identities. We investigate the impact of SUD-based cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) on narrative identity transformation and hypothesise NF as a potential factor in post-treatment relapse. Methods: 107 patients referred to an outpatient clinic for adults with SUDs in the Netherlands were included. Participants completed the “Agency and Communion Inventory” (translated and validated in Dutch), the Narrative Foreclosure Scale (NFS) and the “Measurement of Addiction for Triage and Evaluation” (MATE), including the Depression, Anxiety, and Stress-Scale (DASS-21). Data collection occurred at the start of treatment, post-treatment (+3 months), and during a follow-up measure (+6 months). Results: While participants showed a substantial reduction in substance use frequency and DASS-21 sum scores during CBT-treatment, no such differences were found in narrative themes. Multivariate models revealed that baseline communion and past-directed NF predicted ’substance-use reduction’ during treatment, while ’cannabis use,’ communion and future directed NF were predictors of ’DASS-21 sum score reduction’. Baseline communion showed a moderate positive relation to post-treatment relapse, while ’NFS: Future’ exhibited a moderate inverse relation. These findings remained robust even when altering the criteria for defining ’post-treatment relapse.’ They indicate that a stronger identification with communal themes serve as a protective factor against relapse, while future directed NF is associated with higher relapse rates. Conclusion: this study provides valuable insights into the interplay between narrative themes and treatment outcome(s) in SUD recovery. Notably, our findings underscore the significance of future-directed narrative foreclosure in the recovery process and found that CBT for SUDs does not appear to significantly facilitate narrative identity transformation. These results suggest that existing addiction treatments could be enhanced through the integration of narrative-focused interventions.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352853225000446AddictionAgencyCommunionForeclosureNarrative identity
spellingShingle Mark de Lange
Job van der Palen
Hein de Haan
Exploring agency, communion and narrative foreclosure in cognitive behavioural therapy for substance use disorders
Addictive Behaviors Reports
Addiction
Agency
Communion
Foreclosure
Narrative identity
title Exploring agency, communion and narrative foreclosure in cognitive behavioural therapy for substance use disorders
title_full Exploring agency, communion and narrative foreclosure in cognitive behavioural therapy for substance use disorders
title_fullStr Exploring agency, communion and narrative foreclosure in cognitive behavioural therapy for substance use disorders
title_full_unstemmed Exploring agency, communion and narrative foreclosure in cognitive behavioural therapy for substance use disorders
title_short Exploring agency, communion and narrative foreclosure in cognitive behavioural therapy for substance use disorders
title_sort exploring agency communion and narrative foreclosure in cognitive behavioural therapy for substance use disorders
topic Addiction
Agency
Communion
Foreclosure
Narrative identity
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352853225000446
work_keys_str_mv AT markdelange exploringagencycommunionandnarrativeforeclosureincognitivebehaviouraltherapyforsubstanceusedisorders
AT jobvanderpalen exploringagencycommunionandnarrativeforeclosureincognitivebehaviouraltherapyforsubstanceusedisorders
AT heindehaan exploringagencycommunionandnarrativeforeclosureincognitivebehaviouraltherapyforsubstanceusedisorders