TY - JOUR
T1 - Within-Person Affect Dynamics Among Individuals in Residential Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder
T2 - An Ecological Momentary Assessment Study
AU - Knapp, Kyler S.
AU - Petrie, Daniel J.
AU - Brick, Timothy R.
AU - Deneke, Erin
AU - Bunce, Scott C.
AU - Cleveland, H. Harrington
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 American Psychological Association
PY - 2025/1/9
Y1 - 2025/1/9
N2 - Ecological momentary assessment is increasingly leveraged to better understand affective processes underlying substance use disorder treatment and recovery. Research in this area has yielded novel insights into the roles of mean levels of positive affect (PA) and negative affect (NA) in precipitating drug craving and substance use in daily life. Little of the extant substance use disorder treatment research, however, considers dynamic patterns of PA and NA, separately or in relation to one another, or how such patterns may differ from those observed among nonclinical samples. The current ecological momentary assessment study examined between-person differences in within-person affect dynamics—including intensity, variability, instability, inertia, polarity, and spillover—among patients in residential treatment (n = 73) for opioid use disorder (OUD), both collectively and separately according to posttreatment relapse status, relative to a demographically similar nonclinical comparison group (n = 37). The results revealed no group differences in PA dynamics. The OUD group did, however, report higher average NA intensity and within-day variability relative to the comparison group. Furthermore, relative to the comparison group, OUD patients who relapsed within 120 days posttreatment exhibited greater linear declines in NA intensity across days, whereas OUD patients who did not relapse demonstrated weaker affect polarity (i.e., the within-person correlation between PA and NA). Although PA dynamics alone did not differ between groups, weaker affect polarity differentiated OUD patients who avoided relapse from the comparison group. The capacity to experience PA separately from fluctuations in NA may reflect an adaptive tendency that could reduce vulnerability to relapse among individuals in OUD treatment.
AB - Ecological momentary assessment is increasingly leveraged to better understand affective processes underlying substance use disorder treatment and recovery. Research in this area has yielded novel insights into the roles of mean levels of positive affect (PA) and negative affect (NA) in precipitating drug craving and substance use in daily life. Little of the extant substance use disorder treatment research, however, considers dynamic patterns of PA and NA, separately or in relation to one another, or how such patterns may differ from those observed among nonclinical samples. The current ecological momentary assessment study examined between-person differences in within-person affect dynamics—including intensity, variability, instability, inertia, polarity, and spillover—among patients in residential treatment (n = 73) for opioid use disorder (OUD), both collectively and separately according to posttreatment relapse status, relative to a demographically similar nonclinical comparison group (n = 37). The results revealed no group differences in PA dynamics. The OUD group did, however, report higher average NA intensity and within-day variability relative to the comparison group. Furthermore, relative to the comparison group, OUD patients who relapsed within 120 days posttreatment exhibited greater linear declines in NA intensity across days, whereas OUD patients who did not relapse demonstrated weaker affect polarity (i.e., the within-person correlation between PA and NA). Although PA dynamics alone did not differ between groups, weaker affect polarity differentiated OUD patients who avoided relapse from the comparison group. The capacity to experience PA separately from fluctuations in NA may reflect an adaptive tendency that could reduce vulnerability to relapse among individuals in OUD treatment.
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U2 - 10.1037/abn0000975
DO - 10.1037/abn0000975
M3 - Article
C2 - 39786821
AN - SCOPUS:86000432512
SN - 2769-7541
VL - 134
SP - 184
EP - 200
JO - Journal of Psychopathology and Clinical Science
JF - Journal of Psychopathology and Clinical Science
IS - 2
ER -