| Literature DB >> 25889576 |
Adrian R Pasareanu1, Anne Opsal2,3, John-Kåre Vederhus4, Øistein Kristensen5, Thomas Clausen6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Quality of life (QoL) is increasingly recognized as central to the broad construct of recovery in patients with substance use disorders (SUD). However, few longitudinal studies have evaluated changes in QoL after SUD treatment and included patients with SUD that were compulsorily hospitalized. This study aimed to describe QoL among in-patients admitted either voluntarily or compulsorily to hospitalization and to examine patterns and predictors of QoL at admission and at 6 months post treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25889576 PMCID: PMC4364507 DOI: 10.1186/s12955-015-0231-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Baseline socio-demographic variables, quality of life, and mental stress scores for patients with substance use disorder
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| Total number of patients, N | 202 |
| Mean age, years |
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| Female gender | 68 (34) |
| Education, years |
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| Relationship status, single (N=198) | 136 (69) |
| Main diagnosis | |
| Alcohol use disorder | 16 (8) |
| Both alcohol & drug use disorder | 18 (9) |
| Drug use disorder | 168 (83) |
| Severity scores | |
| Injection usea (N=195) | 105 (54) |
| Duration of most problematic substance use, years |
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| Global Score Index (SCL-90R – GSI)b |
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| Treatment variables | |
| Time in treatment, days |
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| Compulsorily admitted | 65 (32) |
| Quality of life (QoL-5 score) (N=195 |
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aFor the 6 months prior to admission.
bSCL-90-R – GSI: Symptom Check List-90-revised, Global Symptom Index.
Figure 1Distribution of Quality of Life scores (QoL-5) at baseline (N=195). The mean QoL-5 was 0.69 in normative data from a general population sample (green line); a value < 0.55 (yellow line) is considered a markedly reduced QoL; a value < 0.4 (red line) is considered a severely reduced QoL.
Linear regression analysis shows the effect of independent variables on quality of life at baseline in patients with substance use disorder (SUD), N=195 patients
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| Age | −0.01 (0.00/0.00) | 0.553 | |
| Female gender | −0.03 (−0.08/0.02) | 0.268 | |
| Education (years) | −0.01 (−0.02/0.05) | 0.238 | |
| Relationship status, single | 0.01 (−0.04/0.06) | 0.823 | |
| Main SUD diagnosis | −0.02 (−0.08/0.04) | 0.532 | |
| Severity Scores | |||
| Injection use | 0.11 (−0.38/0.06) | 0.671 | |
| Years of using most problematic substance | 0.00 (0.00/0.00) | 0.942 | |
| Global Score Index: SCL-90R - GSI | −0.15 (−0.18/-0.12) | <0.001 | 39% |
| Compulsory hospitalization | 0.02 (−0.03/0.07) | 0.413 |
aSeven patients had missing QoL scores at intake.
bP-value obtained from bivariate linear regression. Only one independent variable had P-value <0.20 in bivariate analyses.
cR2= squared correlation coefficient in order to obtain a measure of explained variance.
Predictors of Quality of Life change from baseline to follow-up, N=118 patients
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| Age | 1.00 (0.96 – 1.05) | 0.862 | – | |
| Female gender | 2.92 (1.12 – 6.71) | 0.013 | 2.64 (1.12 - 6.22) | 0.026 |
| Education (years) | 1.12 (0.92 –1.37) | 0.269 | – | |
| Relationship status, single | 1.14 (0.43 – 2.80) | 0.778 | – | |
| Main diagnosis | 0.93 (0.33 – 2.60) | 0.891 | – | |
| Severity scores | ||||
| Injection use | 0.70 (0.31 – 1.53) | 0.344 | – | |
| Years of using most problematic substance | 1.0 (0.96 – 1.01) | 0.737 | – | |
| Global Score Index: SCL-90R - GSI | 1.72 (0.97 – 3.04) | 0.064 | 1.52 (0.85-2.70) | 0.157 |
| Treatment variables | ||||
| Days in treatment | 1.01 (0.10 – 1.02) | 0.334 | – | |
| Compulsory treatment | 1.28 (0.56 – 2,94) | 0.554 | ||
| Follow-up variables | ||||
| Abstinence at follow-up | 1.51 (0.63 – 3.66) | 0.356 | – | |
| Time in a controlled environment (days)d | 1.03 (0.98 1.03) | 0.86 | – |
The dependent variable was a dichotomized QoL-5 score change, with a cut-off value of ≥ 0.2 (i.e., a large and clinically relevant QoL change).
bP-value obtained from bivariate logistic regression.
cP-value obtained from multivariable logistic regression; multivariable analysis included variables with p-values <0.20 in bivariate analyses.
dTime in controlled environment last 30 days before follow-up interview.