| Literature DB >> 24004685 |
Yuki Maehira1, Ezazul Islam Chowdhury, Masud Reza, Ronald Drahozal, Tarun Kanti Gayen, Iqbal Masud, Sonia Afrin, Noboru Takamura, Tasnim Azim.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To determine relapse rates and associated factors among people who use drugs (PWUDs) attending abstinence-oriented drug treatment clinics in Dhaka, Bangladesh.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24004685 PMCID: PMC3846454 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7517-10-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Daily schedule of NGO-run drug detoxification-rehabilitation programme in Dhaka, Bangladesh
| • Before and immediately after admission, the clinic center rules and regulations, service details are informed to the client. | ||
| • The program schedule is flexible for the client as they struggle with withdrawal symptoms and are not fit enough physically and mentally. | ||
| • Close supervision by medical professionals is ensured for the client during this period based on the treatment protocol that covers pharmacological withdrawal control, monitoring and precautions, other symptomatic medications applicable at clinics. | ||
| • Motivational sessions are offered to the client after 7 days to learn benefits of drug free lives, risk of drug use, HIV/STI, Tuberculosis. | ||
| • After two weeks of detoxification period, the clients are fully involved as shown in the schedule below of the rehabilitation program: | ||
| 6:15–6:45 | Wake up and morning prayer | Prayer (within the group) |
| 6:45–7:00 | Exercise | Freehand exercise and YOGA |
| 7:00–7:45 | Housework | Occupational therapy |
| 7:45–8:30 | Wash/refreshing & group work | |
| 8:30–9:15 | Breakfast & medicine | |
| 9:15–9:45 | Quiet time/relaxation & pre meeting | Relaxation and meditation |
| 9:45–10:30 | Morning meeting/self evaluation | Therapeutic community’s morning meeting for community life/individual weekly evaluation |
| 10:30–10:45 | Free or personal time/(bathroom, wash) | Personal hygiene and care |
| 10:45–11:30 | Morning session | Addiction, anger management, post acute withdrawal management, building self-esteem, values, HIV & STI, communication |
| 11:30–12:00 | Tea break | |
| 12:00-12-30 | Occupational therapy/crafts work/routine health check-up | Development of habit for daily routine/health check-up |
| 12:30–1:15 | Wash/bath time | Personal hygiene and care |
| 1:15–1:45 | Prayer time & Talim (preaching) | Religious practice |
| 1:45–2:45 | Lunch & medicine, rest | |
| 2:45–3:30 | Evening session | Planning, relapse prevention, group therapy, psycho therapy, resentment, basics of behavior change |
| 3:30–3:45 | Routine work/house work | Occupational therapy |
| 3:45–4:00 | Prayer time | Religious practice |
| 4:00–4:15 | Tea break | |
| 4:15–5:15 | Sports & recreation | Outdoor games. summer- football, volleyball. winter- cricket, badminton |
| 5:15–5:30 | Prayer time | |
| 5:360–6:15 | Quite time | |
| 6:15–7:00 | Narcotics anonymous meeting (sharing meeting) | Verbalize and ventilate emotion, feeling, experience , etc. |
| 7:00–8:00 | Group meeting | Community meeting |
| 8:00–8:30 | Prayer time | |
| 8:30–9:00 | Dinner & medicine | |
| 9:00–9:50 | Free time/recreation/watching TV | |
| 9:50–10:00 | Bed preparation & self-cleaning | |
| 10:00–10:45 | Night sharing | Sharing and moral inventory |
| 10:45 | Bed time and lights off | |
Figure 1Flow diagram showing number of subjects at various stages of the study. Two flow diagrams to describe numbers of male (N=150) and female (N=110) study participants from respetive enrollment at admission until the study completion at the two months follow-up interview after discharge.
Comparison of baseline characteristics of PWUDs (on admission to clinics)
| Had previous experience of drug treatment programmes | 54.0 (81) | 67.3 (74) | 0.03 |
| Age in years | | | |
| Mean (SD)* | 32.6 (±7.0) | 26.8 (±6.4) | |
| Median (IQR)▲. | 32.0 (27.0, 36.3) | 25.0 (22.0, 30.0) | <0.01 |
| Level of education, % (n) | | | |
| Less than 1 year | 10.7 (16) | 19.1 (21) | 0.05 |
| 1–5 years | 64.0 (96) | 61.8 (68) | NS |
| >5 years | 25.3 (38) | 19.1 (21) | NS |
| Marital status, % (n) | | | |
| Married / living with sex partner | 31.3 (47) | 43.8 (49) | 0.03 |
| Unmarried | 36.0 (54) | 10.9 (12) | <0.01 |
| Divorced/separated/widower/widow | 32.7 (59) | 44.5 (49) | 0.05 |
| Income level (monthly average in BDT△) | | | |
| Mean (SD)* | 6144 (±3997) | 11397 (±8750) | |
| Median (IQR) ▲. | 5000 (3500, 7000) | 7900 (5000, 15250) | <0.01 |
| % more than Mean | 33.7 | 38.2 | |
| Locations where they live, % (n) | | | |
| House | 48.7 (73) | 30.9 (34) | <0.01 |
| Working place (shop, office, club) | 4.0 (6) | 4.5 (5) | NS |
| Street§ | 42.0 (63) | 20.9 (23) | <0.01 |
| Slum | 5.3 (8) | 43.6 (48) | <0.01 |
| Person(s) with whom they usually live, % (n) | | | |
| Family member, relative | 40.7 (61) | 34.5 (38) | NS |
| Spouse, sex partner | 14.0 (21) | 16.3 (18) | NS |
| Non-PWUD friend, colleague | 2.6 (4) | 6.3 (7) | NS |
| PWUD friend, drug dealer | 26.7 (40) | 29.1 (32) | NS |
| Alone | 16.0 (24) | 13.6 (15) | NS |
| Have children to support, % (n) | 10.7 (16) | 13.6 (15) | NS |
| Drug primarily preferred for consumption, % (n) | | | |
| Cannabis, sleeping pills, codeine containing cough syrup, alcohol | 1.3 (2) | 13.6 (15) | <0.01 |
| Heroin | 16.7 (25) | 72.8 (80) | <0.01 |
| Buprenorphine, pethidine | 82.0 (123) | 13.6 (15) | <0.01 |
| Main route of drug administration, % (n) | | | |
| Orally | 0.0 (0) | 3.6 (4) | 0.03 |
| Inhaling (smoking, snorting, chasing) | 13.3 (20) | 82.7 (91) | <0.01 |
| Injection | 86.7 (130) | 13.6 (15) | <0.01 |
| Duration (years) of injecting drugs (among those who injected in the last six months) | | ||
| Mean (SD)* | 5.9 (±4.4) | 4.1 (±4.7) | |
| Median (IQR) ▲. | 5.0 (3.0, 8.0) | 2.5 (1.0, 6.25) | 0.01 |
| % more than mean | 34.0 (60) | 35.6 (9) | |
| Shared used needle/syringe during last injection (among those who injected in the last six months), % (n) | | ||
| 54.2 (78) | 34.6 (9) | NS | |
| Shared injection paraphernalia during last injection (among those who injected in the last six months), % (n) | | ||
| | 91.7 (132) | 42.3 (11) | <0.01 |
| Had any type of sex, % (n) | 58.0 (87) | 70.0 (77) | 0.05 |
| Bought sex from sex worker, % (n) | 30.7 (46) | 5.5 (6) | <0.01 |
| Sold sex in exchange of money or drugs, % (n) | 0 | 49.1 (54) | <0.01 |
| Frequency of using condoms during sex with commercial sex partner (among those who bought or sold sex), % (n) | | ||
| Always | 63.0 (29) | 42.6 (23) | 0.04 |
| Sometimes | 13.1 (6) | 40.7 (22) | <0.01 |
| Never | 23.9 (11) | 9 (16.7) | NS |
| Had sex with non-commercial partner, % (n) | 35.3 (53) | 45.4 (50) | NS |
| Frequency of using condom during sex with non-commercial partner (among those who had sex with non-commercial partner), % (n) | | ||
| Always | 20.8 (11) | 16.0 (8) | NS |
| Sometimes | 22.6 (12) | 18.0 (9) | NS |
| Never | 56.6 (30) | 66.0 (33) | NS |
| Had group sex, % (n) | 2.7 (4) | 19.1 (21) | <0.01 |
| Had sex just after taking drugs, % (n) | 45.3 (68) | 50.9 (56) | NS |
| Ever been imprisoned, % (n) | 60.7 (91) | 41.8 (46) | <0.01 |
| Ever sold blood, % (n) | 27.3 (41) | 13.6 (15) | 0.01 |
*SD Standard Deviation, ▲.IQR inter-quartile range, NS not significant (p>0.05).
△1 USD is equivalent to 75.88 BDT as of October 2011.
§Street includes abandoned place, park, roof-top, veranda, terminal, and garage.
Figure 2Relapse among PWUD who completed the three-month treatment programme. Survival curve to compare cumulative survival ratio of male and female drug users who relapsed within two months (62 days) after discharge from a three-month detoxification-rehabilitation programme at three NGO-run clinics.
Baseline covariates* (before admission) associated with relapse of male and female PWUDs
| Had previously undergone drug treatment | | | | 0.66 | 0.03 | 1.94 (1.08−3.49) |
| Location where they live | | | | | | |
| Stable housing§ | | | | | | 1.00 (Ref.) |
| Unstable housing† | | | | 0.89 | 0.01 | 2.44 (1.24−4.81) |
| Person(s) with whom they usually live | | | | | | |
| Family member, relative | | | 1.00 (Ref.) | | | |
| Spouse, sex partner | −0.10 | 0.85 | 0.91 (0.32−2.55) | | | |
| Non-PWUD friend, colleague | 1.06 | 0.09 | 2.89 (0.84−9.90) | | | |
| PWUD friend, drug dealer | 0.82 | <0.01 | 2.27 (1.25−4.12) | | | |
| Alone | 0.85 | 0.02 | 2.35 (1.18−4.68) | | | |
| Income level | | | | | | |
| More than the monthly average ‡ | | | | 0.64 | 0.02 | 1.89 (1.13−3.17) |
| Type of drug used as the first choice | | | | | | |
| Cannabis, sleeping pills, codeine containing cough syrup, alcohol | | | | | | 1.00 (Ref.) |
| Heroin | | | | 1.29 | 0.01 | 3.62 (1.39−9.46) |
| Buprenorphine, Pethidine | | | | 1.10 | 0.05 | 3.00 (1.02−8.81) |
| Not had sex with non-commercial partner | 0.82 | 0.01 | 2.27 (1.19−4.33) | |||
*Only the covariates with significance of at least a 5% level for association with relapse were analysed by backward stepwise Cox multivariate analyses.
§Stable housing = house, working place, shop, office, club.
†Unstable housing = street, abandoned place, park, roof-top, veranda, bus/train terminal.
‡Monthly average incomes are BDT 6144 for male, and BDT 11397 for female (1USD is equivalent to 76.20 BDT as of 31 October 2011).
B: Net effect of independent variable. RHR relative hazards risk, CI confidence interval.
Follow-up covariates* (1 month after discharge) associated with relapse of male and female PWUDs
| Location where they live | | | | | | |
| Stable housing§ | | | 1.0 (Ref.) | | | 1.0 (Ref.) |
| Unstable housing† | 1.02 | 0.04 | 2.78 (1.05−7.35) | −0.68 | 0.06 | 0.51 (0.25−1.02) |
| Person(s) with whom they usually live | | | | | | |
| Family member, relative | | | 1.0 (Ref.) | | | |
| Spouse, sex partner | −0.25 | 0.56 | 0.78 (0.34−1.79) | | | |
| Non-PWUD friend, colleague | −0.83 | 0.05 | 0.44 (0.19−0.99) | | | |
| PWUD friend, drug dealer | 0.06 | 0.93 | 1.06 (0.25−3.95) | | | |
| Alone | 1.31 | 0.02 | 3.69 (1.29−10.53 | | | |
| Income level | | | | | | |
| More than monthly average ‡ | 0.91 | 0.01 | 2.48 (1.22−5.02) | | | |
| Not having children to support | | | | 1.18 | <0.01 | 3.24 (1.38−7.64) |
| Bought sex from sex workers | 0.83 | 0.01 | 2.29 (1.25−4.20) | | | |
| Sold sex in exchange of money or drugs | 0.94 | <0.01 | 2.56 (1.52−4.29) | |||
*Only the covariates with significance of at least a 5% level for association with relapse by backward stepwise Cox multivariate analyses.
§Stable housing = house, working place, shop, office, club.
†Unstable housing = street, abandoned place, park, roof-top, veranda, bus/train terminal.
‡Monthly average incomes are BDT 6144 for male, and BDT 11397 for female (1USD is equivalent to 76.20 BDT as of 31 October 2011).
B: Net effect of independent variables. RHR relative hazards risk, CI confidence interval.
Perceived reasons for relapse and changes in drug use patterns 2 months after discharge from a 3-month drug detoxification-rehabilitation programme
| NS | |||
| Peer influence (previous PWUD friends, sexual partner’s drug use) | 32.8 (22) | 45.3 (29) | NS |
| Family-related problem (no peace, poverty in family) | 35.8 (24) | 35.9 (23) | NS |
| Personal problems | 19.4 (13) | 14.1 (9) | NS |
| Drug craving, withdrawal symptoms (including restlessness, sleeping disturbance) | 9.0 (6) | 4.7 (3) | NS |
| To enhance sexual power | 3.0 (2) | - | |
| 0.02 | |||
| 59.7 (40) | 79.7 (51) | | |
| | |||
| Decreased frequency or amount | 55.0 (22) | 62.7 (32) | 0.01 |
| Increased frequency or amount | 10.0 (4) | 15.7 (8) | NS |
| Type of drugs preferred | 35.0 (14) | 13.7 (7) | NS |
| Not specified | - | 7.8 (4) | NS |
*NS not significant (p>0.05).