TY - DATA T1 - Social support and relapse tendency in Chinese women experiencing heroin addiction: a moderated mediation model of active coping strategies and openness to experience AU - Huang, Dawei DO - 10.17632/ZWMF697857.3 UR - https://data.mendeley.com/datasets/zwmf697857/3 AB - The present study The evidence reported above supports the notion that social support both directly affects the relapse tendency of women experiencing heroin addiction, but also may have an indirect impact through the active coping strategies. In addition, the role of social support may also be moderated by openness to experience. Further, previous studies of heroin addiction found that the age of addict and their parents' level of education level were significantly correlated with their rates of heroin abuse (Aggarwal et al., 2015; Kolodny et al., 2015). Therefore, it is necessary to control for these factors in the present study. Based on the above analysis, this study proposes the hypotheses listed here and summarized in the model in Fig. 1. (1) Active coping strategies would mediate the relationship between social support and the relapse tendency. (2) Openness to experience would moderate the relationships between social support and active coping strategies, and between social support and the relapse tendency. (3) Openness to experience would moderate the mediating effect of active coping strategies in the relationship between social support and the relapse tendency. Statistical analyses Descriptive analyses and Pearson’s correlations were used by SPSS 22.0 for all variables. To test the moderated mediation model, we have adopted Stride's advice, and constructs are measured by latent variables as opposed to observed variables (Stride, Gardner, Catley, & Thomas, 2015). The analysis process of the entire model corresponds to the SPSS macro PROCESS (http://www.afhayes.com) suggested by Hayes (2018) but applying Mplus 7.4. The mediating (indirect) effect with 5000 bootstrap samples. In order to better reveal the relationship between latent variables, we used the item parceling strategy (Hall, Snell, & Foust, 1999; Little, Cunningham, Shahar, & Widaman, 2002). The critical value of the statistical test includes p value under the standard 0.05 level, and 95% bias-correction bootstrap confidence interval. KW - Mental Health KW - Cultural Psychology KW - Applied Social Psychology PY - 2020 PB - Mendeley ER -