| Literature DB >> 25530629 |
Jessica L Muilenburg1, Tanja C Laschober2, Lillian T Eby3.
Abstract
Low income adults with substance use disorders (SUDs) have a high prevalence of tobacco use and often limited access to tobacco cessation treatment. This study examines the relationship between low-income SUD patient census (i.e., percentage of patients whose treatment costs are covered by Medicaid and Federal block grants) and SUD programs' availability of three evidence-based tobacco cessation services: behavioral treatments, system-level support, and pharmacotherapy. Data were collected from a random sample of 1,006 program administrators in 2010. Mixed-effects models results show that the percentage of low-income patients is significantly positively associated with the availability of behavioral treatments and system-level support but not pharmacotherapy. Thus, low-income patients may have similar access to tobacco cessation pharmacotherapy but greater access to behavioral treatments and system-level support. However, the availability of tobacco cessation services is not widespread overall, which may hamper access to extensive services to address low-income SUD patients' high smoking rates.Entities:
Keywords: Medicaid coverage; low-income patients; smoking cessation; substance abuse treatment
Year: 2015 PMID: 25530629 PMCID: PMC4266556 DOI: 10.1177/0022042614552020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Drug Issues ISSN: 0022-0426