| Literature DB >> 31694664 |
Anne Opsal1,2, Øistein Kristensen3, Thomas Clausen3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Health care workers in the addiction field have long emphasised the importance of a patient's motivation on the outcome of treatments for substance use disorders (SUDs). Many patients entering treatment are not yet ready to make the changes required for recovery and are often unprepared or sometimes unwilling to modify their behaviour. The present study compared stages of readiness to change and readiness to seek help among patients with SUDs involuntarily and voluntarily admitted to treatment to investigate whether changes in the stages of readiness at admission predict drug control outcomes at follow-up.Entities:
Keywords: Involuntary admission to treatment; Substance use disorder; Treatment motivation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31694664 PMCID: PMC6836455 DOI: 10.1186/s13011-019-0237-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policy ISSN: 1747-597X
Fig. 1Modified Transtheoretical (Stages of Change) Model based on the theory that individuals follow a circular rather than linear path as they flow through a series of stages to modify behaviour (Modified from the work of Prochaska and DiClemente)
Instruments used in the study at admission, discharge and 6 months follow-up
| Admission | Discharge | 6 months follow-up | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ICD-10a | Clinical interview/observation | ||
| European Addiction Severity Index | Clinical interview/observation | Clinical interview/observation | |
| Readiness to Change Questionnaire | Questionnaire | ||
| Treatment Readiness Tool | Questionnaire | Questionnaire | |
| Follow up interview | Clinical interview |
aICD-10: International Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, 10th Revision
Baseline sociodemographic variables and mental stress scores for involuntarily admitted or voluntarily admitted patients
| Involuntary n/Voluntary n | Involuntary | Voluntary | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years | |||
| Median | 65/137 | 24 | 28 |
| Q1, Q3 | 65/137 | 21.0, 34.5 | 23.5, 36.0 |
| Range | 65/137 | 18.0–57.0 | 19.0–61.0 |
| Female, n (%) | 65/137 | 31 (48) | 37 (27) |
| Substance useb, d | |||
| Alcohol | 60/132 | 29 (48.3) | 41 (31.1) |
| Heroin | 61/134 | 21 (34.4) | 18 (13.4) |
| Other opiates | 60/130 | 11 (18.3) | 25 (19.2) |
| Benzodiazepines, other sedatives | 60/134 | 39 (65.0) | 63 (47.0) |
| Amphetamines | 62/135 | 35 (56.5) | 67 (49.6) |
| Cannabis | 61/133 | 32 (52.5) | 71 (53.4) |
| Cocaine, inhalants, hallucinogens | 60/132 | 12 (20.0) | 18 (13.6) |
| Mental diagnosis | |||
| No mental diagnosis | 65/137 | 26 (40.0) | 35 (25.5) |
| Severe mental diagnoses (F20-F39) | 65/137 | 14 (21.5) | 38 (27.7) |
| Other mental diagnoses (F40-F99) | 65/137 | 25 (38.5) | 64 (46.7) |
| Education | |||
| Mean years in primary school and high school (SD) | 59/130 | 10.5 (1.4) | 10.6 (1.6) |
| Patients attending college and university, | 59/130 | 4 (7) | 14 (11) |
| Sources of financial supporta, b, | |||
| Employment | 60/130 | 6 (10) | 24 (19) |
| Public welfare benefits | 62/135 | 59 (95) | 115 (85) |
| Partner, family, or friends | 60/130 | 17 (28) | 37 (29) |
| Illegal activity | 60/130 | 24 (40) | 47 (36) |
| Living arrangementb, | |||
| With partner | 59/130 | 8 (13) | 11 (9) |
| Alone | 59/130 | 31 (52) | 62 (48) |
| With family | 59/130 | 9 (15) | 26 (20) |
| No stable arrangements | 59/130 | 9 (15) | 16 (12) |
| Controlled environment | 59/130 | 2 (3) | 15 (12) |
| Treated by a physician for somatic diseasesb, | 60/130 | 24 (40) | 32 (25) |
| Injecting illicit drugb, | 61/134 | 43 (71) | 62 (46) |
| Overdoses on drugsc, | 59/130 | 41 (70) | 63 (49) |
| Suicide attemptsc, | 60/131 | 23 (38) | 71 (54) |
Q1, Q3: first, third quartile, SD: standard deviation. aSome patients had more than one source of financial support,
bLast 6 months before admission, cLifetime prevalence, dSome patients had more than one substance use
Fig. 2Percentage of patients admitted to the hospital based on stage of Readiness to Change
Fig. 3Changes in Treatment Readiness Tool (TReaT) stage from admission to discharge from addiction treatment centres. a Involuntarily admitted patients (n = 45). b Voluntarily admitted patients (n = 108). Unchanged stage: Yellow, changed to lower stage: Red, changed to higher stage: Green
Multiple regression analysis of the proportion of abstinence days 30 days prior to follow-up
| Characteristic | Coefficient b | (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Constant | 72.5 | 0.001 | (40.3 to 104.8) |
| Injected drug abusea | −25.5 | 0.002 | (−41.7 to −9.2) |
| Involuntary hospital admission | −16.0 | 0.076 | (−33.7 to 1.7) |
| Readiness for change (RCTQ) | 14.0 | 0.083 | (−1.9 to 29.9) |
| Age | 0.2 | 0.696 | (−0.7 to 1.0) |
| Gender | −8.6 | 0.318 | (−25.5 to 8.4) |
aDuring the 6 months prior to admission