| Literature DB >> 16257880 |
A Thomas McLellan1, Rosalyn L Weinstein, Quansheng Shen, Connie Kendig, Marvin Levine.
Abstract
Philadelphia attempted to expand the access to and continuity of addiction treatment by focusing on the 15% of patients who received multiple, detoxification-only (MDO) treatments each year. Clinical Case Managers at five detoxification centers encouraged MDO patients to continue care following detoxification in methadone, residential, or outpatient rehabilitation, and sustain improvements, and they recommended opening detoxification access for additional patients as well. System administrative information was available for one year prior and three years during the intervention. Counts of unduplicated patients within each year and measures of the length and type of treatment episodes determined the intervention effects. Records from a sub-sample of 100 MDO patients were examined to assess specific changes in system utilization. Over three years, 890 MDO patients were case managed and had received assessment, referral, and transport to health care and sober living. The sub-sample of case-managed MDO patients showed a 55% reduction in detoxification-only admissions, a 70% increase in use of rehabilitation, and a twenty-day increase in the average length of stay per episode. Though there are noted limitations in the evaluation design, the findings are consistent with the view that individual case management of MDO patients may improve the clinical appropriateness and administrative efficiency of public addiction treatment.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16257880 DOI: 10.1080/10550490500247099
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Addict ISSN: 1055-0496