A 3-year study of addiction mutual-help group participation following intensive outpatient treatment

被引:81
|
作者
Kelly, John F.
Stout, Robert
Zywiak, William
Schneider, Robert
机构
[1] Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Dept Psychiat, Addict Res Program, Boston, MA 02114 USA
[2] Harvard Univ, Sch Med, Boston, MA 02115 USA
[3] Decis Sci Inst, Providence, RI USA
[4] Brown Univ, Providence, RI 02912 USA
[5] Harvard Univ, Pilgrim Healthcare, Boston, MA 02115 USA
关键词
mutual-help groups; self-help; Alcoholics Anonymous; Narcotics Anonymous; SMART recovery; Women for Sobriety;
D O I
10.1111/j.1530-0277.2006.00165.x
中图分类号
R194 [卫生标准、卫生检查、医药管理];
学科分类号
摘要
Addiction-focused mutual-help group participation is associated with better substance use disorder (SUD) treatment outcomes. However, little has been documented regarding which types of mutual-help organizations patients attend, what levels of participation may be beneficial, and which patients, in particular, are more or less likely to participate. Furthermore, much of the evidence supporting the use of these organizations comes from studies examining participation and outcomes concurrently, raising doubts about cause-effect connections, and little is known about influences that may moderate the degree of any general benefit. Alcohol-dependent outpatients (N=227; 27% female; M age=42) enrolled in a randomized-controlled telephone case monitoring trial were assessed at treatment intake and at 1, 2, and 3 years postdischarge. Lagged-panel, hierarchical linear models tested whether mutual-help group participation in the first and second year following treatment predicted subsequent outcomes and whether these effects were moderated by gender, concurrent axis I diagnosis, religious preference, and prior mutual-help experience. Robust regression curve analysis was used to examine dose-response relationships between mutual-help and outcomes. Mutual-help participation was associated with both greater abstinence and fewer drinks per drinking day and this relationship was not found to be influenced by gender, Axis I diagnosis, religious preference, or prior mutual-help participation. Mutual-help participants attended predominantly Alcoholics Anonymous and tended to be Caucasian, be more educated, have prior mutual-help experience, and have more severe alcohol involvement. Dose-response curve analyses suggested that even small amounts of participation may be helpful in increasing abstinence, whereas higher doses may be needed to reduce relapse intensity. Use of mutual-help groups following intensive outpatient SUD treatment appears to be beneficial for many different types of patients and even modest levels of participation may be helpful. Future emphasis should be placed on ways to engage individuals with these cost-effective resources over time and to gather and disseminate evidence regarding additional mutual-help organizations.
引用
收藏
页码:1381 / 1392
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Social recovery model - The influence of 12-step mutual-help participation on the course of youth recovery over 8-years following inpatient treatment
    Kelly, John F.
    Brown, Sandra A.
    Abrantes, Ana M.
    Kahler, Christopher W.
    Myers, Mark G.
    [J]. ALCOHOLISM-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, 2008, 32 (06) : 302A - 302A
  • [12] Open doors of a psychiatric intensive care unit with addiction patients: A 3-year Follow up study
    Schmid, Petra
    Uhlmann, Carmen
    [J]. FORTSCHRITTE DER NEUROLOGIE PSYCHIATRIE, 2019, 87 (09) : 493 - 498
  • [13] Approximal caries development following intensive fluoride mouthrinsing in teenagers. A 3-year radiographic study
    Petersson, LG
    Svanholm, I
    Andersson, H
    Magnusson, K
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ORAL SCIENCES, 1998, 106 (06) : 1048 - 1051
  • [14] Evaluation of Ongoing Participation of People with Schizophrenia in a Mutual Support Group as a Complementary Intervention to Outpatient Psychiatric Treatment
    José Alberto Orsi
    Fernando Rocha Loures Malinowski
    Simão Kagan
    Richard Weingarten
    Cecília Cruz Villares
    Rodrigo Affonseca Bressan
    Walter Ferreira de Oliveira
    Mário César Rezende Andrade
    Ary Gadelha
    [J]. Psychiatric Quarterly, 2021, 92 : 1283 - 1296
  • [15] Evaluation of Ongoing Participation of People with Schizophrenia in a Mutual Support Group as a Complementary Intervention to Outpatient Psychiatric Treatment
    Orsi, Jose Alberto
    Malinowski, Fernando Rocha Loures
    Kagan, Simao
    Weingarten, Richard
    Villares, Cecilia Cruz
    Bressan, Rodrigo Affonseca
    de Oliveira, Walter Ferreira
    Andrade, Mario Cesar Rezende
    Gadelha, Ary
    [J]. PSYCHIATRIC QUARTERLY, 2021, 92 (03) : 1283 - 1296
  • [16] Women's Longitudinal Career Trajectories Following Their Participation in a 3-Year Computing Camp
    Narayanasamy, Maya
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE 53RD ACM TECHNICAL SYMPOSIUM ON COMPUTER SCIENCE EDUCATION (SIGCSE 2022), VOL 2, 2022, : 1102 - 1102
  • [17] Outpatient group psychotherapy: A valuable continuation treatment for patients with borderline personality disorder treated in a day hospital? A 3-year follow-up study
    Wilberg, T
    Friis, S
    Karterud, S
    Mehlum, L
    Urnes, O
    Vaglum, P
    [J]. NORDIC JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 1998, 52 (03) : 213 - 221
  • [18] INTENSIVE SURVEILLANCE FOR INFECTIONS IN A 3-YEAR STUDY OF NURSING-HOME PATIENTS
    JACKSON, MM
    FIERER, J
    BARRETTCONNOR, E
    FRASER, D
    KLAUBER, MR
    HATCH, R
    BURKHART, B
    JONES, M
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1992, 135 (06) : 685 - 696
  • [19] Addiction Psychiatry in PGY-3: Use of the Intensive Outpatient Treatment Setting to Train Senior Residents
    Juan P. Sanchez-Ramirez
    Ramandeep Gakhal
    Scott A. Oakman
    [J]. Academic Psychiatry, 2016, 40 : 517 - 519
  • [20] Dupuytren Contracture Recurrence Following Treatment with Collagenase Clostridium Histolyticum (CORDLESS Study): 3-Year Data
    Peimer, Clayton A.
    Blazar, Philip
    Coleman, Stephen
    Kaplan, F. Thomas D.
    Smith, Ted
    Tursi, James P.
    Cohen, Brian
    Kaufman, Gregory J.
    Lindau, Tommy
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HAND SURGERY-AMERICAN VOLUME, 2013, 38A (01): : 12 - 22