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Scandinavian Journal of Public Health
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The Alcoholic's Wife and Her Conflicting Roles

II. A Follow-up Study

Carl S. Albretsen

From the Psychiatric Department B, Ullevål Hospital, Oslo, Norway

Per Vaglum

From the Psychiatric Department B, Ullevål Hospital, Oslo, Norway

This follow-up study is concerned with the prognosis of roles and symptom-formation in a group of twelve wives of alcoholics 2 1/2–3 years after their first admittance to our psychiatric department. Our first study offered evidence for an understanding of these women's role transition from "rescuer", "dummy" or "alcoholic" to "patient" as a result of an alteration in their present relationships and/or internal psychological situation in the direction of an intolerable role, that of the "persecutor". The follow-up study further confirms these findings. Women in the "rescuer"-role were asymptomatic. Women with symptoms (in the "patient" or the "persecutor" role) still seemed to be caught in a human role web where they had no opportunity to return into the "rescuer" role. This seemed to be due partly to their husbands' worsening behaviour, and partly to a "wife-rescuer" still operating, trying to force the wives into a "persecutor" role vis-à-vis their husbands.

Scandinavian Journal of Public Health, Vol. 1, No. 1, 7-12 (1973)
DOI: 10.1177/140349487300100103


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