| Literature DB >> 26995560 |
John-Kåre Vederhus1, Bente Birkeland2, Thomas Clausen2,3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Patients with a substance use disorder (SUD), admitted for detoxification, often suffer from a poor quality of life (QoL). We set out to monitor QoL, together with substance use, in a departure from the usual norm of measuring substance use alone as a treatment outcome. Literature searches revealed scant knowledge of how QoL is influenced. With this in mind, we aimed to investigate whether total abstinence, prior to follow-up, could influence QoL.Entities:
Keywords: Norway; Substance use disorders; Treatment outcome
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26995560 PMCID: PMC4980398 DOI: 10.1007/s11136-016-1272-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Qual Life Res ISSN: 0962-9343 Impact factor: 4.147
Characteristics of study respondents (N = 140)
| Characteristic | N (%) or |
|---|---|
| Age, years |
|
| Female | 45 (32) |
| Proportion native Norwegians or European origin | 134 (96) |
| Education, years |
|
| Relationship, proportion living in relationship | 74 (53) |
| Main diagnosis (ICD-10) | |
| (1) Alcohol dependence ( | 54 (39) |
| (2) Both alcohol and drug dependence | 26 (19) |
| (3) Drug dependence | 60 (43) |
| Severity variables | |
| Earlier SUD treatment (prior to current detoxification) | 108 (77) |
| Years of problematic usea of the major drugs of abuse |
|
| Alcohol composite score (EuropASI)b |
|
| Drug composite score (EuropASI)b |
|
| Self-rated substance use severityc |
|
| Injection use in the last 6 months | 40 (29) |
| Psychological distressd |
|
| Quality of lifee |
|
| Days on the ward |
|
aProblematic use, as defined in EuropASI, was the consumption of 5 or more standard drinks at least 3 times weekly, or binge drinking on 2 consecutive days to a level that affected daily functioning. For drug use, only frequency was needed; 3 times weekly or 2 consecutive days
bEuropASI composite score, scale 0–1
cSYRAAP, severity score of the substance use, scale 1–5
dSCL-10, global score index, scale 1–4
eQoL-5, scale 0.1–0.9
Fig. 1QoL changes from baseline to follow-up based on QoL status at baseline (N = 113). Green line mean score of a general reference population. Red line mean change of patients with near-to-normal QoL at baseline (>0.55). Yellow line mean change of patients with markedly reduced QoL at baseline (0.40–0.55). Blue line mean change of patients with severely reduced QoL at baseline (<0.40)
Fig. 2Comparison of QoL scores of patients that were abstinent or relapsed at follow-up (N = 113). Blue line patients abstinent last 30 days before follow-up. Red line patients relapsed in the last 30 days before follow-up. *p value for the difference (Student’s t-test) < 0.05
Predictors of QoL at follow-up (N = 113)
| Predictor |
|
|
|---|---|---|
| Socio-demographic variables | ||
| Gender (female) | 0.00 (−0.07/0.05) | 0.844 |
| Age, years | 0.00 (−0.00/0.00) | 0.921 |
| Living alone | −0.08 (−0.14/−0.02) | 0.007 |
| Psychological distressc | −0.08 (−0.13/−0.02) | 0.007 |
| Self-rated substance use severityb | 0.00 (−0.04/0.06) | 0.796 |
| QoL-5 at baseline | 0.19 (−0.05/0.43) | 0.114 |
| Follow-up variables | ||
| Mutual-help group participationd | 0.00 (−0.00/0.00) | 0.759 |
| Inpatient SUD treatment during follow-up (days) | 0.00 (−0.00/0.00) | 0.779 |
| Abstinence in the 30 days before follow-up | 0.12 (0.06/0.18) | <0.001 |
aMultiple linear regression with simultaneous entry of variables (the “enter” method); unstandardized beta coefficient with 95 % confidence interval (CI)
bPerceived severity of the substance use, a subscale of the Survey of Readiness for AA Participation; SYRAAP
cSymptom Check List-10, global score index
dNumber of meetings in addiction-related mutual-help groups during follow-up