| Literature DB >> 31620036 |
Jone Bjornestad1, Thomas Solgaard Svendsen2, Tale Ekeroth Slyngstad2, Aleksander H Erga3, James R McKay2,4,5, Sverre Nesvåg2, Alexander Waagan Skaalevik2, Marius Veseth6, Christian Moltu7.
Abstract
Background: Studies investigating the subjective experiences of long-term recovery from substance use disorder are scarce. Particularly, functional and social factors have received little attention.Entities:
Keywords: drug change; drug reduction; functional factors; long-term recovery; recovery; social factors; substance use; substance use disorder
Year: 2019 PMID: 31620036 PMCID: PMC6759477 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00689
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Steps of text condensation.
| 1. | Becoming familiar with the data through careful reading of the transcribed interviews, forming a main impression of the experiences of the participants, and identification of potential important themes. A theme was defined as a verbalization capturing an important element of the data in relation to the research question, representing a patterned response in the data set. |
| 2. | Generating initial codes, which were defined as the most basic segments of the raw data that could be assessed in a meaningful way regarding the phenomenon. |
| 3. | Searching for and developing candidate themes and subthemes. Remaining codes were set aside at this phase in a separate category for the purpose of being further analyzed and incorporated when appropriate. |
| 4. | Reviewing themes to develop a coherent thematic map and considering the validity of individual themes in relation to the data set. |
| 5. | Defining and naming themes: further refining and defining themes, identifying the essence of themes, identifying subthemes, and summarizing the contents of the main themes into what each researcher considered to best represent participants’ experiences. When our refinements no longer added substantially to the themes, the analytic process was closed. |
| 6. | To determine the relevance of a particular theme, we both counted the frequency of the relevant meaning units combined with our interpretation of how central the theme was perceived to the recovery process. |
| 7. | Last, the tentative model of findings, with illustrative quotes, was sent to two fully recovered service users who served as critical auditors assessing the interpretations made through our descriptions of the central organizing concepts. |
Baseline and follow-up demographic, clinical, treatment-related, psychological, and social variables.
| Baseline (N = 30) | Year 1 (N = 30) | Year 2 (N = 30) | Year 3 (N = 30) | End point assessment | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year 4 (N = 10) | Year 5 (N = 20) | ||||||
|
| |||||||
| Age | 25.9 (5.5) | – | – | – | – | – | |
| Male/female, n | 17/13 | – | – | – | – | – | |
| Education, years | 12.8 (1.8) | – | – | – | – | – | |
|
| |||||||
| Age of initial use | 13.1 (1.8) | – | – | – | – | – | |
| Years of drug use | 12.9 (6.0) | – | – | – | – | – | |
| AUDIT score | 11.9 (11.4) | 3.4 (7.6) | 2.3 (4.1) | 2.9 (6.8) | 4.4 (7.0) | 2.2 (3.2) | |
| DUDIT score | 29.0 (15.9) | 6.6 (13.1) | 3.1 (11.5) | 1.9 (8.5) | 0 (-) | 0 (-) | |
|
| |||||||
| Previous treatment attempts | 1.3 (2.0) | – | – | – | – | – | |
| Currently outpatient, n (%) | 13 (43.3) | 17 (56.7) | 8 (26.7) | 5 (16.7) | 2 (20.0) | 2 (9.5) | |
| Currently inpatient, n (%) | 17 (56.7) | 5 (16.7) | 4 (13.3) | 2 (6.7) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | |
| Currently in self-help group | 13 (43.3) | 13 (43.4) | 15 (50.0) | 10 (33.3) | 4 (40.0) | 3 (14.3) | |
|
| |||||||
| Permanent housing, n (%) | 15 (50.0) | 25 (83.3) | 25 (83.3) | 26 (86.6) | 10 (100) | 21 (100) | |
| Stable income, n (%) | 16 (53.3) | 21 (70.0) | 27 (90.0) | 27 (90.0) | 10 (100) | 21 (100) | |
| Employed/student, n (%) | 5 (16.7) | 7 (23.3) | 14 (46.7) | 19 (63.3) | 10 (100) | 21 (100) | |
| Abstinent friends | 24 (80.0) | 25 (83.3) | 26 (86.7) | 27 (90.0) | 10 (100) | 21 (100) | |
|
| |||||||
| SCL90-R GSI | 1.2 (0.7) | 0.7 (0.7) | 0.6 (0.5) | 0.5 (0.4) | 0.5 (0.4) | 0.4 (0.5) | |
| BRIEF-A GEC | 67.2 (11.3) | 57.2 (11.3) | 54.9 (12.6) | 51. (10.9) | 52.5 (10.5) | 50.4 (11.2) | |
| SWLS, sum score | 17.5 (6.8) | 24.8 (6.7) | 24.8 (5.2) | 25.2 (5.4) | 25.3 (2.7) | 27.4 (5.0) | |
All numbers are mean (SD), unless otherwise specified. SCL-90-R GSI, Symptom Checklist-90 Revised Global Severity Index T-score; BRIEF-A GEC, Behavioral Rating Inventory of Executive Function—Adult Version Global Executive Composite T-score; SWLS, Satisfaction With Life Scale; AUDIT, Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test; DUDIT, Drug Use Disorders Identification Test.
Currently in self-help group, such as Narcotics Anonymous (NA)/Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) and the like.
Social variables are positive responses to yes/no questions.
Friends without a history of substance use.
Figure 1A proposed transitional model of surrender and differentiation across themes.