| Literature DB >> 29541869 |
Alice Munro1, Anthony Shakeshaft2, Anton Clifford2,3.
Abstract
Upon publication of the original article (Munro et al., 2017), the authors noticed the following errors.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29541869 PMCID: PMC5852122 DOI: 10.1186/s40352-018-0061-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Justice ISSN: 2194-7899
Orana Haven treatment program logic
| a. Client areas of need | b. Treatment | c. Mechanisms of change | d. Process measures | e. Outcomes* | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Core treatment components | Flexible activities | ||||
|
| Healing through culture and country | - Being on country/spiritualty | Reconnecting clients to culture and country via activities and strong relationships | No. of clients engaged in regular cultural activities |
|
| Case management | - Referrals to local health services and visiting specialists | Clients engaged in the program via positive therapeutic alliance between staff and clients | No. of clients staying in the program for 3 or more mths | ||
|
| Therapeutic activities | - One-on-one counselling | Improving client quality of life | No. of clients maintaining abstinence 3 months post discharge |
|
| Life skills | - Develop daily routine | Reconnecting clients to culture and country | No. of vocational-related courses completed | ||
| Time out from substances | - Improve physical wellbeing (eg. sleep routine / nutrition) | Identify and engage in positive alternative activities to substance use to learn how to take time out from substance substances | No. of clients engaging in regular exercise / cultural activities | ||
| Aftercare support | - Referrals to services post-discharge (eg. ACCHOs) | Continue to access treatment and care required to maintain improved health and wellbeing post discharge | No. of clients maintaining abstinence/not involved in crime post discharge | ||
*Measured at admission, mid, discharge and 3mths post discharge from the OH program