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Showing papers by "Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre published in 1972"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Hospital staff's attitudes to drug addiction and their perceptions of the characteristics of drug addicts were investigated by means of a questionnaire containing a set of 19 attitude statements and 23 semantic differential scales, finding that although most hospital staff do not condone the misuse of drugs they are against victimizing drug addicts, feeling that they are ill people who deserve treatment.
Abstract: Hospital staff's attitudes to drug addiction and their perceptions of the characteristics of drug addicts were investigated by means of a questionnaire containing a set of 19 attitude statements and 23 semantic differential scales on which they rated four types of patient: ‘the hard-drug addict’, ‘the alcoholic’, ‘the mentally ill patient’ and the ‘soft-drug addict’. Factor analysis of the responses showed, first, that attitudes to drug addiction could be described in terms of five basic dimensions, and secondly, that patients were perceived in terms of four dimensions: Assertiveness, Dangerousness, Non-conformity and Attractiveness. In addition there were two more general perceptual dimensions: Extraversion and Psychopathy. From the informants' positions on these different dimensions it was concluded that although most hospital staff do not condone the misuse of drugs they are against victimizing drug addicts, feeling that they are ill people who deserve treatment. Both hard- and soft-drug addicts are regarded as unconventional. Hard-drug addicts are seen as dangerous and sexually unattractive, whereas soft-drug addicts are seen as harmless, sexually attractive and assertive. Although doctors and nurses agree about most of these characteristics, the nurses see the hard-drug addict as assertive but the doctors see him as timid. In more general personality terms, although the soft-drug addict is seen by most staff as extraverted and lacking in psychopathy and the hard-drug addict as psychopathic, nurses also regard the latter as extraverted whereas doctors regard him as introverted. Conclusions are drawn about the implications of these findings for hospital policy. Hypotheses are also suggested about the personality of different types of drug-taker.

20 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that this procedure has some advantages over other methods for overcoming the problem of concept–scale interaction which have been proposed in the past.
Abstract: Data collected in a study of hospital staff attitudes to drug addicts and other types of patient are used to illustrate the problem of concept–scale interaction in semantic differential research. Results of factor analysis of the four within-concepts correlation matrices diverged sharply from the results of the factor analysis of the across-concepts correlation matrix. Although the first two unrotated orthogonal factors could be identified in the ratings of all concepts, some of the rotated factors did not appear for some concepts. For the purposes of comparing the concepts in terms of the factors, scores were computed for each factor from the across-concepts factor-score estimation weights, but only for those concepts to which the factors applied. It is concluded that this procedure has some advantages over other methods for overcoming the problem of concept–scale interaction which have been proposed in the past.

10 citations