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Behavioral,psychological, and historical correlates of MacAndrew scale scores among male alcoholics
Authors:Patrick Mahlen O'Neil  Joseph P. Giacinto  Lewis R. Waid  John C. Roitzsch  William C. Miller  Dean G. Kilpatrick
Affiliation:(1) Alcohol Dependence Treatment Program, Veterans Administration Medical Center, Charleston, South Carolina;(2) Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, 29425 Charleston, South Carolina
Abstract:Male alcoholic veterans (N=194) were divided into four groups on the basis of their scores on the MacAndrew scale (MAC) of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) and compared on psychological and sociodemographic measures and self-reported alcohol, drug, and legal histories. Nineteen subjects scored in the ldquononalcoholicrdquo (NA) range of the MAC (i.e., false negatives, MACle23). Remaining subjects, scoring in the ldquoalcoholicrdquo range of the MAC, were divided into thirds by MAC scores (lowest third, L-MAC=24–28,n=53; middle third, M-MAC=29–31,n=63; highest third, H-MAC>31,n=59). Groups did not differ on age, any important sociodemographic variables, or scores on the Profile of Mood States, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, Symptom Checklist-90, or Rod and Frame Test. Significant group differences were obtained on several MMPI scales. Lower MAC scores were associated with higher scores onL, K, D, andR, and lower scores onMa. There was also a tendency for subjects with lower MAC scores to score higher onSi. NA subjects began drinking and heavy drinking later than other subjects, although groups did not differ on duration, quantity, or frequency of drinking. Subjects with higher MAC scores more often reported drinking in bars, drinking liquor straight, alcohol-related job disruptions, and previous use of marijuana, hallucinogens, and barbiturates. Subjects with higher MAC scores had more often been arrested, convicted, fined, and jailed for alcohol-related offenses but not for other offenses. Results are examined with respect to MacAndrew's distinction between primary and secondary alcoholics and with respect to the possible relations of MAC to important person variables such as sensation seeking.The authors wish to thank Craig MacAndrew for his helpful critical reading of an early draft of this paper. We also thank Theresa Hilliard, Shirley White, Vicki Brumbelow, and Pam Thompson for editorial assistance and Audrey Jefferson for help with data preparation.
Keywords:MacAndrew scale  alcoholism  Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)
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