Literature DB >> 20532873

Daily life hour by hour, with and without cocaine: an ecological momentary assessment study.

David H Epstein1, Kenzie L Preston.   

Abstract

RATIONALE: Effects of an intervention cannot be understood without precise knowledge of the baseline behavior on which the intervention is superimposed. For misusers of illicit drugs, patterns of daily activities and moods have not been studied in a way that is amenable to statistical aggregation.
OBJECTIVE: The aim of the study was to compare hour-by-hour daily activities in cocaine-dependent outpatients during urine-verified periods of use and abstinence.
METHODS: In a cohort design, a volunteer sample of 112 methadone-maintained cocaine- and heroin-abusing outpatients provided ecological momentary assessment (EMA) data on handheld computers for 10,781 person-days. EMA responses to questions about current location, activities, companions, moods, and recent exposure to putative drug-use triggers were compared across periods of use and abstinence using SAS Proc Glimmix (for binary outcomes) and Proc Mixed (for continuous outcomes).
RESULTS: Periods of cocaine use were associated with idle, solitary, affectively negative afternoons but, unexpectedly, were also associated with a greater likelihood of early-morning or late-evening work. The whole-day concomitants of cocaine use were often distinct from the acute predecessors of use seen in prior analyses from the same sample. Several measures of negative mood increased during abstinence.
CONCLUSIONS: Weeks of cocaine use and abstinence in outpatients are associated with distinct patterns of mood and behavior; the detailed hourly data reported here should help inform treatment interventions aimed at changing daily activities. The findings also argue against the contention that cocaine abstinence symptoms decrease monotonically from the day of cessation.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20532873      PMCID: PMC2940233          DOI: 10.1007/s00213-010-1884-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)        ISSN: 0033-3158            Impact factor:   4.530


  12 in total

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Review 3.  Ecological momentary assessment.

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Authors:  S F Coffey; B S Dansky; M H Carrigan; K T Brady
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Authors:  S L Satel; L H Price; J M Palumbo; C J McDougle; J H Krystal; F Gawin; D S Charney; G R Heninger; H D Kleber
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8.  Abstinence symptomatology and psychiatric diagnosis in cocaine abusers. Clinical observations.

Authors:  F H Gawin; H D Kleber
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9.  Effects of "binge" use of intravenous cocaine in methadone-maintained individuals.

Authors:  R W Foltin; M W Fischman
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Authors:  William J Kowalczyk; Jeremiah W Bertz; Landhing M Moran; Karran A Phillips; Udi E Ghitza; David H Epstein; Kenzie L Preston
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8.  Sleep reductions associated with illicit opioid use and clinic-hour changes during opioid agonist treatment for opioid dependence: Measurement by electronic diary and actigraphy.

Authors:  Jeremiah W Bertz; David H Epstein; David Reamer; William J Kowalczyk; Karran A Phillips; Ashley P Kennedy; Michelle L Jobes; Greg Ward; Barbara A Plitnick; Mariana G Figueiro; Mark S Rea; Kenzie L Preston
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