Literature DB >> 25824855

Differences in successful treatment completion among pregnant and non-pregnant American women.

Ethan Sahker1,2, Jennifer E McCabe3, Stephan Arndt4,5,6.   

Abstract

The present study explores characteristics of successful substance abuse treatment completion of pregnant women through an analysis of retrospective outcomes data. Women without prior treatment admissions, aged 18-44, and not in methadone maintenance therapy were included (N = 678,782). Chi-square tests analyzed significant differences; logistic regression provided predictive probabilities; odds ratios (OR) and risk differences with 95 % confidence intervals represent the effect sizes and clinically meaningful differences. Pregnant women were less likely to successfully complete treatment than non-pregnant women (χ (2) = 321.33, df = 1, p < 0.0001), though the difference was not clinically meaningful (risk difference = 4.75, 95 % confidence interval (CI) = 4.23-5.26). Aside from criminal justice agencies, "other community agencies" refer the greatest percentage of pregnant women to treatment (risk difference = 6.37, 95 % CI = 5.89-6.84). Pregnant women successfully complete treatment more than non-pregnant women in only non-intensive outpatient settings (χ (2) = 10,182.48, df = 7, p < 0.0001). Further attention to referral source and treatment setting for pregnant women may improve successful treatment completion by targeting needs of pregnant women. Referring to non-intensive outpatient and residential hospital treatment settings may help to ameliorate prenatal substance abuse treatment contingent on the primary problem substance.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Community health; Pregnant; Substance abuse; Treatment outcomes

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25824855     DOI: 10.1007/s00737-015-0520-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Womens Ment Health        ISSN: 1434-1816            Impact factor:   3.633


  4 in total

1.  Mental Disorders and Suicide Attempts in the Pregnancy and Postpartum Periods Compared with Non-Pregnancy: A Population-Based Study.

Authors:  Natalie P Mota; Mariette Chartier; Okechukwu Ekuma; Yao Nie; Jennifer M Hensel; Leonard MacWilliam; Chelsey McDougall; Simone Vigod; James M Bolton
Journal:  Can J Psychiatry       Date:  2019-03-20       Impact factor: 4.356

2.  Transactional relations between caregiving stress, executive functioning, and problem behavior from early childhood to early adolescence.

Authors:  Linda L Lagasse; Elisabeth Conradt; Sarah L Karalunas; Lynne M Dansereau; Jonathan E Butner; Seetha Shankaran; Henrietta Bada; Charles R Bauer; Toni M Whitaker; Barry M Lester
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2016-08

3.  Assessing factors associated with discharge from opioid agonist therapy due to incarceration in the United States.

Authors:  Phillip L Marotta; Kristi L Stringer; Amar D Mandavia; Alissa Davis; Leo Beletsky; Tim Hunt; Dawn Goddard-Eckrich; Elwin Wu; Louisa Gilbert; Nabila El-Bassel
Journal:  J Addict Dis       Date:  2019-12-10

4.  Use of a machine learning framework to predict substance use disorder treatment success.

Authors:  Laura Acion; Diana Kelmansky; Mark van der Laan; Ethan Sahker; DeShauna Jones; Stephan Arndt
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-04-10       Impact factor: 3.240

  4 in total

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