Literature DB >> 3938612

Is inpatient rehabilitation of the alcoholic cost effective? Con position.

H M Annis.   

Abstract

Across all sectors of the health care system there is pressure to increase the cost-effectiveness of service delivery. In recent years, a number of official reports in the alcoholism field have called for the establishment of alternatives to traditional inpatient hospitalization for alcoholics. This paper briefly reviews five bodies of scientific evidence that bear on this recommendation. It is concluded that: inhospital alcoholism programmes of a few weeks to a few months duration show no higher success rates than periods of brief hospitalization of a few days; the great majority of alcoholics seeking treatment for alcohol withdrawal can be safely detoxified without pharmacotherapy and in nonhospital-based units--detoxification with pharmacotherapy on an ambulatory basis has also been shown to be a safe alternative at one-tenth the cost; "partial hospitalization" (day treatment) programmes have been found to have equal or superior results to inpatient hospitalization at one-half to one-third the cost; well-controlled trials have also demonstrated that outpatient programmes can produce comparable results to inpatient programmes--one estimate places the cost saving at $3700 per patient compared with the typical course of inpatient treatment; and a growing body of evidence suggests that if patients could be matched on clinically significant dimensions to a range of treatment alternatives, much higher overall improvement rates in the alcoholism treatment field would be observed. The question that should guide future investigation is "What treatments are most effective for what types of alcoholics?"

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Year:  1985        PMID: 3938612     DOI: 10.1300/J251v05n01_12

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Adv Alcohol Subst Abuse        ISSN: 0270-3106


  4 in total

1.  Cost-effectiveness of substance disorder interventions for people with severe mental illness.

Authors:  J M Jerrell; T W Hu; M S Ridgely
Journal:  J Ment Health Adm       Date:  1994

2.  Pathological gamblers: inpatients' versus outpatients' characteristics.

Authors:  Robert Ladouceur; Caroline Sylvain; Serge Sévigny; Lynda Poirier; Laurent Brisson; Carlos Dias; Claudie Dufour; Pierrette Pilote
Journal:  J Gambl Stud       Date:  2006-12

3.  Costs of day hospital and community residential chemical dependency treatment.

Authors:  Lee Ann Kaskutas; Silvana K Zavala; Sujaya Parthasarathy; Jane Witbrodt
Journal:  J Ment Health Policy Econ       Date:  2008-03

4.  A randomized controlled efficacy trial of behavioral activation for concurrent stimulant use and sexual risk for HIV acquisition among MSM: project IMPACT study protocol.

Authors:  Matthew J Mimiaga; David W Pantalone; Katie B Biello; Tiffany Rose Glynn; Christopher M Santostefano; Jennifer Olson; Dana J Pardee; Jaclyn M W Hughto; Josibel Garcia Valles; Adam W Carrico; Kenneth H Mayer; Steven A Safren
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2018-07-25       Impact factor: 3.295

  4 in total

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