Périodique
Unlinking disability income, substance use and adverse outcomes in dually diagnosed, severely mentally ill outpatients
(Etude des liens entre pension d'invalidité, usage de drogue et avenir à problème chez les usagers en traitement de maintenance et présentant des troubles mentaux sévères)
Auteur(s) :
RIES, R. K. ;
SHORT, R. A. ;
DYCK D. G. ;
SREBNIK D. S.
Année :
2004
Page(s) :
390-397
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Refs biblio. :
24
Domaine :
Drogues illicites / Illicit drugs
Thésaurus mots-clés
USAGER
;
COCAINE
;
TRAITEMENT AMBULATOIRE
;
EFFICACITE
;
PSYCHOPATHOLOGIE
;
COMORBIDITE
;
HANDICAP
Note générale :
American Journal on Addictions, 2004, 13, (4), 390-397
Note de contenu :
graph. ; tabl.
Résumé :
ENGLISH :
The goals of the current study were to determine whether incorporating disability benefit management into combined outpatient psychiatric/addiction treatment was feasible and clinically useful for managing severely mentally ill, substance-abusing patients over time, and then if patients in this program would demonstrate the first week-of the-month increased substance abuse and hospitalisations shown in other studies. Forty-four patients were studied for an average of forty weeks, with little treatment or study dropout There was no evidence in either the schizophrenic/cocaine abuser or the broader diagnostic sample of the cyclic first of the-month pattern of substance use and hospitalizations observed in other studies. Findings suggest that combined treatment/benefit management programs are clinically feasible and effective in stabilizing patients and keeping them in treatment. (Author' s abstract)
Affiliation :
Box 359911, Harborview Medical center, 325 Ninth Avenue, Seattle WA 98104. Email : rriesu.washington.edu
Etats-Unis. United States.
Etats-Unis. United States.