Learning Disabilities in Alcohol-Dependent Adults

Author:

Rhodes Sharyn S.1,Jasinski Donald R.2

Affiliation:

1. Sharyn S. Rhodes, PhD, is coordinator of special education, Loyola College, Baltimore, Maryland. She has been a professor teaching in the area of learning disabilities and special education for 15 years and has been researching the relation between alcoholism and learning disabilities for the last 3 years. Address: Sharyn S. Rhodes, Loyola College, 4501 N. Charles St., Baltimore, MD 21210.

2. Donald R. Jasinski, MD, is chief, Center for Chemical Dependence, Francis Scott Key Medical Center, Baltimore, Maryland, and associate professor, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. He was formerly the scientific director of the Intramural Research Program of the National Institute on Drug Abuse and is an internationally known pharmacologist. Dr. Jasinski has published over 200 papers on substance abuse and alcoholism.

Abstract

To determine if neuropsychological deficits, known to precede alcohol use in those genetically predisposed to alcoholism, were present in an alcoholic population, 25 male alcoholics (mean age 41.1) were interviewed concerning alcohol usage, educational difficulties in elementary school, and family history of alcoholism. Using a regression table, discrepancies between current IQ on the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised (WAIS-R) (Wechsler, 1981) and achievement on the Woodcock-Johnson Psycho-Educational Battery (WJB) (Woodcock & Johnson, 1977) were calculated to determine present learning status. Forty percent of the alcoholics were found to have had special education, remedial services, or repeated grade failure concurrent with a familial history of alcoholism and current discrepancies indicative of learning disability. There were no significant differences on intelligence, years of drinking, or mean grades completed in school between this group and the rest of the subjects who did not receive services in school. Conclusions were that childhood learning disorders may be related to the development of alcoholism, particularly when alcoholism is in the family, and that special educators have a role to play in the prevention and treatment of alcoholism.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Health Professions,Education,Health (social science)

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