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Addiction Treatment Outcomes

Addiction Treatment Outcomes. Prof Michael Gossop National Addiction Centre Maudsley Hospital/Institute of Psychiatry. Why should we be interested in outcomes?. Why should we be interested in outcomes? Natural history. Why should we be interested in outcomes?

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Addiction Treatment Outcomes

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  1. Addiction Treatment Outcomes Prof Michael Gossop National Addiction Centre Maudsley Hospital/Institute of Psychiatry

  2. Why should we be interested in outcomes?

  3. Why should we be interested in outcomes? • Natural history

  4. Why should we be interested in outcomes? • Treatment effectiveness

  5. The Clinical Fallacy

  6. A common but mistaken model of treatment outcomes Heavy drinking Treatment Outcome

  7. (Pre-treatment problems affect outcomes) Heavy drinking Treatment Outcome

  8. Heavy drinking Treatment Outcome Therapists respond to presenting problems by providing targeted interventions

  9. Presenting problems lead to altered treatment interventions as well as affecting post-treatment outcomes. [ - ] [ + ] [ + ] Heavy drinking Treatment Outcome

  10. Presenting problems lead to altered treatment interventions as well as affecting post-treatment outcomes. [ - ] [ + ] [ + ] Heavy drinking Treatment Outcome Psych. factors Content & Process Environment

  11. Multidimensionality(multiple outcomes) • Drug outcomes • Route of drug administration • Alcohol outcomes • Social adjustment (e.g. employment) • Crime • Mental health • Physical health • Mortality

  12. PROBLEMS Problems and Dependence: two separate dimensions DEPENDENCE

  13. NTORSThe National Treatment Outcome Research Study • Prospective cohort study. • 1075 clients admitted to treatment. • Treatments representative of 4 national treatment modalities. • Repeated follow-up over 5 years.

  14. Regular heroin use(NTORS methadone programmes) from Gossop et al., 2003)

  15. Regular heroin use(Methadone treatment : TOPS/US)

  16. Related Outcomes

  17. Regular heroin use(NTORS methadone programmes) from Gossop et al., 2003)

  18. Regular non-prescribed methadone use

  19. Regular benzodiazepine use

  20. Injecting and sharing – methadone programmes

  21. Causes of death among opiate addicts(Norway) Trauma Overdose Somatic

  22. Mortality RatesPrior to, during, and after maintenance treatment (Norway)

  23. Anxiety and Depression(5 year outcomes: methadone programmes)

  24. Time to follow-upIs bigger better?

  25. Psychiatric symptom scores(Short-term outcomes: methadone programmes)

  26. Predictors of psychiatric symptoms at 6 months • Pre-treatment symptom scores • Heroin use at 6 months • Illicit methadone use • Benzodiazepine use • Stimulant use

  27. Unrelated Outcomes

  28. Crack cocaineUsers and non-users at intake

  29. Frequency of drinking: methadone programmes

  30. Drinking quantity/day: methadone programmes

  31. Years since 1st injection and positive hepatitis serostatus(Noble et al.,2000) HCV HBV

  32. Returning to …... Related Outcomes

  33. CrimeWhat is it?Where does it come from?

  34. Since it came to power in 1997, the New Labour Government created more than three and a half thousand new ways of becoming a criminal.

  35. “The more laws, the less justice” German proverb

  36. “The more laws, the more offenders” Thomas Fuller, MD, 1732

  37. Selling a grey squirrel. Importing Polish potatoes. Offering to sell a game bird killed on a Sunday. Allowing an unlicensed concert in a church hall. To enter the hull of the Titanic.

  38. To cause a nuclear explosion.

  39. Types of acquisitive crime before admission to treatment (percent of NTORS cohort) (from Stewart et al., 2000)

  40. Total crimes reported before admission to treatment (NTORS) (from Stewart et al., 2000)

  41. Involvement in acquisitive crime during 90 days before admission to treatment (NTORS) (from Stewart et al., 2000)

  42. The majority of the acquisitive crimes were committed by a small minority of the NTORS clients • Over three quarters (76%) of the total number of acquisitive crimes were committed by just 10% of the sample.

  43. Acquisitive crime: methadone programmes

  44. The association between drug use and acquisitive crime • Heroin: Odds = 11.4 (4.1-32.0, 95% CI) • Cocaine Odds = 3.1 (1.9-5.0, 95% CI)

  45. Acquisitive crime: methadone programmes

  46. Regular heroin use(NTORS methadone programmes) from Gossop et al., 2003)

  47. Acquisitive crime: methadone programmes

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