| Literature DB >> 26644283 |
Jiang Haifeng1, Liang Di2, Du Jiang1, Sun Haiming1, Chen Zhikang1, Fu Liming3, Zhao Min1.
Abstract
Studies on recovery patterns and how baseline factors influence recovery consequences among heroin dependent patients have shown mixed results. This study is aimed at describing the gender differences in long-term recovery patterns and exploring the predictors of negative recovery consequences by gender among heroin dependent patients in Shanghai, China. At baseline, this study recruited 503 heroin dependent patients discharged from Shanghai compulsory rehabilitation facilities in 2007 and 2008. In this cohort study, the baseline data was then linked with participants' 5-year follow-up data from official records. Generalized Estimating Equations (GEE) were used to compare males with females in terms of the presence of negative consequences (incarceration, or readmission to compulsory treatment, or both), in the subsequent 5-years after their discharge from compulsory treatment. Ordinary least squares (OLS) regression was used to explore factors associated to the time length of negative consequences in 5 years after the discharge for males and females separately. Our findings indicate that female heroin dependent patients tend to have less negative recovery outcomes than male patients. Male patients with a life-time history of poly drug use and female patients with borderline personality disorder are especially at risk of incarceration and readmission into compulsory treatment programs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26644283 PMCID: PMC4672322 DOI: 10.1038/srep17974
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
The demographic and clinical characteristics of the participants.
| Total (N = 503) | Male (n = 238) | Female (n = 265) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26.4 ± 7.9 | 27.8 ± 8.5 | 25.2 ± 7.1 | |
| Han | 497(98.8%) | 235(98.7%) | 262 (98.9%) |
| Less than high school | 272 (54.1%) | 143 (60.1%) | 129 (48.7%) |
| High school (9–12 grade) | 208 (41.3%) | 85 (35.7%) | 123 (46.4%) |
| More than high school | 23 (4.6%) | 10 (4.2%) | 13 (4.9%) |
| Currently married | 147 (29.2%) | 57 (23.9%) | 90 (34.0%) |
| Employed (fulltime & part time & housewife) | 150 (29.8%) | 72 (30.3%) | 78 (29.4%) |
| unemployed | 322 (64.0%) | 139 (58.4%) | 183 (69.1%) |
| incarcerated | 31 (6.2%) | 27 (11.3%) | 4 (1.5%) |
| | 23.6 ± 7.9 | 24.5 ± 7.1 | 22.7 ± 7.5 |
| Injection | 29 (5.8%) | 8 (3.4%) | 21 (7.9%) |
| Sniffing | 449 (89.3%) | 219 (92.0%) | 230 (86.8%) |
| unknown | 25 (5.0%) | 11 (4.6%) | 14 (5.3%) |
| | 0.95 ± 0.55 | 0.84 ± 0.56 | 1.04 ± 0.52 |
| | 2.6 ± 1.7 | 2.7 ± 1.7 | 2.4 ± 1.6 |
| | 10.7 ± 25.5 | 20.3 ± 33.5 | 2.0 ± 8.6 |
| | 170 (33.8%) | 61 (25.6%) | 109 (41.1%) |
| | 72 (14.31%) | 30 (12.6%) | 42 (15.9%) |
| | 27 (5.4%) | 10 (4.2%) | 17 (6.4%) |
| | 18 (3.6%) | 9 (3.8%) | 9 (3.4%) |
| | 37 (7.4%) | 16 (6.7%) | 21 (7.9%) |
| | 94 (18.7%) | 55 (23.1%) | 39 (14.7%) |
| | 165 (32.8%) | 127 (53.4%) | 38 (14.3%) |
Figure 1Natural history of heroin dependent patients who discharged from the compulsory treatment program in Shanghai, China.
Figure 2Percentage of male and female participants who having negative consequences in 5 years after the discharge from compulsory treatment.
Comparison of recovery patterns after discharge from compulsory treatment by gender using GEE (n = 466+).
| Main effects of being female | Main effects of Time | Interaction effects of being female × Time | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Negative consequences* after adjustment | OR = 0.811 CI:[0.715, 0.920] ( | OR = 1.004 CI:[1.002, 1.006] ( | OR = 0.994 CI:[0.991, 1.006] ( |
| Negative consequences* without adjustment^ | OR = 0.807 CI:[0.719, 0.905] ( | OR = 1.004 CI:[1.002, 1.006] ( | OR = 0.994 CI:[0.991, 0.997] ( |
*Negative consequences: defined as having incarceration or readmission to compulsory treatment or both. ^Adjusted covariates: life-time history of mental disorders (anxiety disorder, mood disorders, and psychotic disorders), the life-time history of using illicit drugs other than heroin, the life-time history of borderline personality disorder and antisocial personality disorder, education, baseline employment status, baseline marriage status, age of onset of using heroin, baseline age, baseline dose of heroin use, baseline frequency of heroin use, and incarceration and compulsory treatment experience before baseline. +16 Death cases of total participants were excluded in the analysis. 21 cases were excluded automatically by Stata 12 due to missing data in covariates.
Risk factors associated with the number of months in incarceration and compulsory treatment during 5 years after discharge from compulsory treatment for both gender estimated by OLS model.
| Male (n = 214), Mean Difference (95% CI) | Female (n = 252), Mean Difference (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| Marriage (binary) | 0.60 (−5.58, 4.38) | −1.12 (−4.84, 2.60) |
| Baseline age | −0.12 (−0.68, 0.44) | 0.05 (−0.26, 0.36) |
| Education | ||
| Less than high school | 0.56 (−9.59, 10.71) | 4.11 (−4.24, 12.45) |
| high school | −3.63 (−13.87, 6.61) | 3.08 (−5.15, 11.31) |
| more than high school | Reference | Reference |
| Employment (binary) | 0.06 (−4.87, 4.99) | −2.62 (−6.39, 1.14) |
| Drug use history | ||
| Onset age | 0.33 (−0.27, 0.94) | −0.16 (−0.38, 0.05) |
| Current daily frequency of drug use each day | −0.06 (−1.51, 1.38) | 0.23 (−0.97, 1.44) |
| Current daily dose of drug use each day | −2.05 (−5.97, 1.87) | 0.07 (−3.54, 3.67) |
| No. of compulsory rehabilitation before the baseline interview | 0.11 (−1.47, 1.24) | −0.73 (−1.88, 0.43) |
| No. of month for incarceration before the baseline interview | 0.02 (−0.05, 0.08) | −0.13 (−0.33, 0.06) |
| Life-time history of using other illegal drugs (binary) | 1.06 (−2.65, 4.76) | |
| Mental health history | ||
| Life-time history of having psychosis (binary) | −1.83 (−12.75, 9.09) | 6.45 (−0.63, 13.53) |
| Life-time history of having anxiety disorder (binary) | −6.09 (−17.17, 4.99) | −6.16 (−16.16, 3.84) |
| Life-time history of having mood disorders (binary) | −2.19 (−11.33, 6.95) | 0.59 (−5.49, 6.67) |
| Life-time history of having borderline personality disorder (binary) | −2.42 (−7.79, 2.95) | |
| Life-time history of having antisocial personality disorder (binary) | −0.47 (−4.94, 3.99) | −1.74 (−6.99, 3.50) |
*p = 0.020; **p = 0.006