21 results on '"Thom Browne"'
Search Results
2. Analysis of umbilical cord tissue as an indicator of in utero exposure to toxic adulterating substances
- Author
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Kari M. Midthun, Brandon N. Nelson, Frederick G. Strathmann, Thom Browne, and Barry K. Logan
- Subjects
umbilical cord ,adulterant ,levamisole ,dipyrone ,phenacetin ,xylazine ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
In utero drug exposure is a significant public health threat to the well-being and normal development of the neonate. Recently, testing of umbilical cord tissue (UCT) has been employed to measure illicit drug exposure, as drugs used by the mother during the third trimester may be retained in the UCT. Focus has also been given to potential adverse health effects among drug users, resulting from exposure to pharmacologically active adulterants and cutting agents in the street drug supply. The in utero effects of these substances have not been well studied in humans, nor has their presence been demonstrated as a means for assessing adverse health effects in the neonate. Here, we describe the application of a novel test method to analyze UCT for the presence of more than 20 common adulterating/cutting substances via LC/Q-TOF. In total, 300 de-identified UCT samples were analyzed–all had previously tested positive for cocaine or opiates. Generally, the positivity rates of individual compounds were similar between the Cocaine and Opiates Subgroups, apart from levamisole, xylazine, dipyrone (metabolites), and promethazine. Many of the adulterants used in the street drug supply do have legitimate medicinal/therapeutic uses, including several of the compounds most frequently detected in this study. Caffeine and lidocaine were the most frequently identified compounds both individually (>70% each) and in combination with each other. Alternatively, levamisole, an adulterant with no legitimate therapeutic use, was present in 12% of cases. Importantly, this data demonstrates that the detection of traditional drugs of abuse may serve as indicators of potential in utero exposure to toxic adulterating substances during gestation. While there is cause for concern with respect to any unintentional drug exposure, illicit drug use during pregnancy, including uncontrolled dosing, poly-adulterant consumption, and the interactions of these drug mixtures, produces a significant public health threat to the neonate which warrants further study.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Implementation and Evaluation of an Intervention for Children in Afghanistan at Risk for Substance Use or Actively Using Psychoactive Substances
- Author
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Abdul Subor Momand, Elizabeth Mattfeld, Brian Morales, Manzoor Ul Haq, Thom Browne, Kevin E. O’Grady, and Hendrée E. Jones
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
The present study examined the impact of a novel intervention for children at risk for substance use or actively using substances that was provided to 783 children between 4 and 18 years of age in Afghanistan. They received the Child Intervention for Living Drug-free (CHILD) protocol while in outpatient or residential treatment. CHILD included age-appropriate literacy and numeracy, drug education, basic living safety, and communication and trauma coping skills. A battery of measures examined multiple child health domains at treatment’s start and end and 12 weeks later. For younger children, there were no significant Gender or Gender X Time effects (all p’s > .16 and .35, resp.). The time main effect was significant for all outcomes (all p’s < .00192, the prespecified per-comparison error rate). Post hoc testing showed significant improvements from residential treatment entry to completion for all scales. For older children, a time main effect was significant for (all p’s < .00192, the prespecified per-comparison error rate) all but one outcome. Community follow-up means were significantly lower than residential treatment entry means. CHILD had a positive impact on children, and treatment impact endured from posttreatment to follow-up assessment.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The Rapidly Changing Composition of the Global Street Drug Supply and its Effects on High-risk Groups for COVID-19
- Author
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Thom Browne, Mark S. Gold, and David M. Martin
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,Drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Public health ,Opioid overdose ,medicine.disease ,Heroin ,Substance abuse ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Addiction medicine ,Environmental health ,Health care ,Pandemic ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,business ,media_common ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: Globally, an alarming number of pharmaceutically active compounds are now routinely added to the street drugs of abuse, cocaine and heroin. In some cases, seventeen (17) or more potentially toxic compounds are found in a single street purchased bag or block of cocaine or heroin. Pharmacologically active compounds, impurities, or breakdown products from drug manufacturing and industrial chemicals (collectively referred to as toxic adulterants) are now found in street drugs. They include, but are not limited to: antipsychotics, antidepressants, anxiolytics, antihistamines, anthelmintics, anesthetics, antiinflammatorys, antipyretics, analgesics, antispasmodics, antiarrhythmics, antimalarials, veterinary medications, bronchodilators, expectorants, sedatives, muscle relaxers, natural/synthetic hallucinogens, decongestants, new psychoactive substances (NPS), industrial compounds, fungicides, and impurities in the manufacturing process. All can be found within a single street purchase of heroin or cocaine. Routine clinical or workplace drug testing will not detect all these toxic adulterants. Only specialty forensic tests, specifically ordered, will detect them. The synergistic effect on the human body of such an unprecedented combination of pharmacologically active compounds is unknown and potentially deadly. This is especially seen in daily substance users who are exposed to these combinations multiple times a day over an extended period of time. Individuals with substance use disorders (SUDs) have several co-occurring health problems that make them more susceptible to COVID-19, including compromised immune, pulmonary, cardiovascular, and respiratory systems. These problems are high-risk factors for the acquisition of COVID-19 infection and more serious complications from the virus, including hospitalization and death. Objective: The study aims to bring to the attention of public health officials, addiction medicine specialists, treatment officials, therapists, and the general public the alarming increase of dangerous toxic adulterants being added to street drugs and their potentially lethal synergistic effects. Also, it aims to provide insights into how these new formulations can have serious pathophysiological effects on individuals with Substance Abuse Disorders (SUDs) during the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: The literature on street drug cutting agents, toxic adulterants, NPS, manufacturing byproducts, and other industrial compounds will be reviewed. Also, a review of the literature of pathophysiological effects, especially on SUD patients, in light of the COVID-19 pandemic will be presented. This is combined with international and USA studies that were carried out by the Colombo Plan that identified these new combinations of toxic adulterants in street drugs, using state-of-the-art field and forensic laboratory detection technologies. Results: The majority of street drugs, in some cases more than ninety-five percent, now have multiple toxic adulterants. It is rare that a street purchase of cocaine or heroin does not contain multiple toxic adulterants, cutting agents, NPS, manufacturing byproducts, or industrial chemicals. Conclusion: This dangerous new composition in world street drug supply is unprecedented and may be the undetected cause of many psychostimulant and opioid overdose deaths, as many toxic adulterants are not routinely tested in post-mortem or street drug seizure cases. In addition, several of these toxic adulterants create a catastrophic drop in white blood cells, causing neutropenia and making the substance users susceptible to a wide range of opportunistic infections, including COVID-19. This profound change in the world street drug supply has catastrophic implications for individuals with SUDs and our health care system, especially in the era of the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Published
- 2021
5. Increasing Substance Use Disorder Treatment Professionals Knowledge: The Child Intervention for Living Drug-free (CHILD) Curriculum
- Author
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Hendrée E, Jones, Abdul Subor, Momand, Ashley C, Lensch, Thom, Browne, Brian, Morales, and Kevin E, O'Grady
- Subjects
education ,Article - Abstract
BACKGROUND: A worldwide and ever-growing population of children are using psychoactive substances. To slow this problem, the Child Intervention for Living Drug-Free (CHILD) Curriculum was created to train treatment providers on how to screen, assess, and treat children between the ages of 4–12 years of age exposed to or actively using psychoactive substances. The purpose of the present project was to evaluate the extent to which completion of a six-session training of the six courses of the CHILD Curriculum met the objective of increasing the participants’ knowledge of the Curriculum’s approach to treating children for substance use problems. METHODS: 71 participants from Africa, Asia, and South America were invited for training and 100% accepted the invitation. Trainees completed an in-person small-group course, occurring over 32 days and comprising 256 total hours. During the CHILD Curriculum training, they completed six separate, 20-item, multiple choice knowledge assessment measures, one for each of the six courses comprising the Curriculum. RESULTS: Significant (ps.5) and moderate for a sixth course. Percentage change from baseline varied from a low of 17% to a high of 63%. CONCLUSION: The CHILD Curriculum provides a useful educational framework to ensure knowledge gains by trainees. This curriculum content and evaluation provides a framework for future training of providers to pre-adolescent children who use psychoactive substances or are at risk for such use.
- Published
- 2022
6. Co‐administration of morphine and levamisole increases death risk, produces neutropenia and modifies antinociception in mice
- Author
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Ana K. Ruiz‐Quiñonez, Zyanya P. Espinosa‐Riquer, César J. Carranza‐Aguilar, Thom Browne, and Silvia L. Cruz
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Male ,Pharmacology ,Analgesics ,Mice ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neutropenia ,Levamisole ,Morphine ,Naloxone ,Animals ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Mecamylamine - Abstract
Levamisole is a veterinary anthelmintic drug and a common adulterant of misused drugs. This study analyses the lethal, antinociceptive and haematological effects produced by acute or repeated levamisole administration by itself or combined with morphine. Independent groups of male Swiss Webster mice were i.p. injected with 100 mg/kg morphine, 31.6 mg/kg levamisole (lethal doses at 10%, LD
- Published
- 2022
7. The Emerging Role of Toxic Adulterants in Street Drugs in the US Illicit Opioid Crisis
- Author
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Vanila M. Singh, Joshua Montgomery, and Thom Browne
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Prescription Drugs ,Illicit Drugs ,business.industry ,Street drugs ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Global Health ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,United States ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Fentanyl ,Executive Perspective ,Opioid ,Residence Characteristics ,Humans ,Medicine ,Drug Overdose ,Opioid Epidemic ,Drug Contamination ,business ,Psychiatry ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2019
8. Qualitative LC-Q-TOF Analysis of Umbilical Cord Tissue via Data-Dependent Acquisition as an Indicator of In Utero Exposure to Toxic Adulterating Substances
- Author
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Barry K. Logan, Thom Browne, Brandon N Nelson, Abigail Cervantes, and Frederick G. Strathmann
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Drug ,Xylazine ,Lidocaine ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Pharmacology ,Toxicology ,Analytical Chemistry ,Heroin ,Umbilical Cord ,Cocaine ,Pregnancy ,Caffeine ,Environmental Chemistry ,Medicine ,Humans ,media_common ,Adulterant ,Chemical Health and Safety ,business.industry ,Phenacetin ,Levamisole ,Metamizole ,Acetaminophen ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Diphenhydramine ,Female ,business ,Drug Contamination ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Toxic adulterants are drug or chemical agents used to add bulk volume to traditional drugs of abuse such as cocaine and heroin. These cutting agents include levamisole, metamizole, noxiptillin, phenacetin and xylazine as well as common legal drugs such as acetaminophen, caffeine, diphenhydramine, lidocaine, quinine, quetiapine and tramadol. Because they possess pharmacological activity they result in exposure of the user, but also in the case of pregnant women, the developing fetus, to potential drug toxicity. We describe the development, validation and implementation of a rapid (48 second sample-to-sample) test based on a qualitative data-dependent liquid chromatography–quadrupole time of flight mass spectrometry method for the analysis of toxic adulterating substances in umbilical cord tissue (UCT) samples. The method provides a means of studying potential in utero exposure to these agents. Library spectra comparison at three different collision energies was used in conjunction with retention time and accurate mass to identify these substances in UCT. Analytically based reporting limits were established to determine positivity rates of adulterants in UCT utilizing a standard addition approach. The method was applied to authentic cocaine and opioid positive UCT to screen for toxic adulterants. There were a total of 82 potential adulterant positives found in a 30-sample cohort of authentic UCT samples, with an average of 2.7 substances per case. Lidocaine was the predominant finding followed by caffeine, and diphenhydramine all of which could result from non-illicit drug exposure, however, there were positives for levamisole, phenacetin, noxiptillin and xylazine none of which are approved in the United States for human therapeutic use. This initial set of data established a preliminary positivity rate of potentially toxic adulterants in UCT samples positive for cocaine or opioid use.
- Published
- 2021
9. The CHILD Intervention for Living Drug-free Comprehensive Assessment of Risk, Resilience, and Experience (CHILD CARRE) Measure: Initial Findings
- Author
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Thom Browne, Mercedez Aranguren, Maria Valeria Fratto, Silvina Sanchez, Hendrée E. Jones, Kevin E. O'Grady, Nicolas Poliansky, Diego Ruiz, Brian Morales, and Abdul Subor Momand
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Social Psychology ,Interview ,media_common.quotation_subject ,030508 substance abuse ,Article ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,Interpersonal relationship ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Cross-cultural ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychiatry ,General Psychology ,media_common ,05 social sciences ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine.disease ,Life domain ,Mental health ,Substance abuse ,Psychological resilience ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
This paper summarizes the development and evaluation of an assessment instrument for children ages 7-12. The CHILD CARRE measure is a semi-structured interview with 7 domains. Children from the USA and Argentina (N=134) completed baseline and follow-up assessments. Substance use occurred at an average age of 8. Almost 33% of the children were taking medications for medical issues, more than 50% of them said that medical problem gets in the way of doing things they like to to do and almost 64% of the children stated that they would like to feel better. On average, children completed third grade in school, 56% of them knew how to read and 26% of the children started making money at age 8. Most children (74%) saw someone drunk or high and 23% of children reported alcohol or psychoactive substance use. Among these children using substances, such substance use occurred at an average age of 8, and in the past 30 days they used these substances an average for 5 days. The rating of level of risk on the part of the interviewer placed these children in the "risky" to "very risky" categories. Most children reported seeing their family members smoking (83%) or using alcohol (67%), and 49% reported seeing their family members high on drugs. Few children (10%) had conflicts with the law, while 46% of their family members had legal problems. Some children (30%) reported having serious problems getting along with family members, neighbors, or friends. These results suggest that this measure can serve as the first comprehensive measure to assess multiple life domains for young children at risk for or using psychoactive substances.
- Published
- 2021
10. Inherent Dangers of Using Non-US Food and Drug Administration-Approved Substances of Abuse
- Author
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Thom Browne, C Michael White, and Anne N. Nafziger
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Drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions ,Substance-Related Disorders ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Drug overdose ,Medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Drug Interactions ,Intensive care medicine ,Adverse effect ,media_common ,Pharmacology ,Active ingredient ,Illicit Substance ,business.industry ,Illicit Drugs ,United States Food and Drug Administration ,Addiction ,food and beverages ,COVID-19 ,Drug interaction ,medicine.disease ,United States ,business ,Counterfeit Drugs - Abstract
Use of US Food and Drug Administration-approved substances of abuse has innate risks due to pharmacologic and pharmacokinetic properties of the medications, but the risk when using nonapproved drug products is much greater. Unbeknownst to the user, the dose of active ingredients in substances of abuse can vary substantially between different products because of manufacturing practices or improper storage. Even naturally occurring substances of abuse can have extensive dosage variability because of effects of the growing season and conditions, or differences in harvesting, storage, or manufacture of the finished products. Many illicit substances are adulterated, to make up for intentional underdosing or to enhance the effect of the intended active ingredient. These adulterants can be dangerous and produce direct cardiovascular, neurologic, hematologic, or dermatologic reactions or obscure adverse effects. Finally, an illicit substance can be contaminated or substituted for another one during its manufacture, leading to differences in adverse events, adverse event severity, or the drug interaction profile. Substances can be contaminated with microbes that induce infections or heavy metals that can damage organs or cause cancer. This milieu of undisclosed substances can also induce drug interactions. For reasons that are discussed, individuals who use substances of abuse are at increased risk of morbidity or mortality if they develop coronavirus disease 2019. Health professionals who treat patients with acute, urgent events associated with substances of abuse, or those treating the chronic manifestations of addiction, need to appreciate the complex and variable composition of substances of abuse and their potential health effects.
- Published
- 2021
11. Implementation and Evaluation of a Psychoactive Substance Use Intervention for Children in Afghanistan: Differences Between Girls and Boys at Treatment Entry and in Response to Treatment
- Author
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Thom Browne, Kevin E. O'Grady, Gilberto Gerra, Brian Morales, Elizabeth Mattfeld, Abdul Subor Momand, Hendrée E. Jones, and Manzoor Ul Haq
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,business.industry ,Treatment entry ,Psychoactive substance ,Life skills ,biology.organism_classification ,Response to treatment ,Article ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Cannabis ,Substance use ,Psychiatry ,business ,Psychosocial - Abstract
Psychoactive substance use among children in Afghanistan is an issue of concern. Somewhere around 300,000 children in the country have been exposed to opioids that either parents directly provided to them or by passive exposure. Evidence-based and culturally appropriate drug prevention and treatment programs are needed for children and families. The goals of this study were to: (1) examine lifetime psychoactive substance use in girls and boys at treatment entry; and (2) examine differential changes in substance use during and following treatment between girls and boys. Children ages 10–17 years old entering residential treatment were administered the Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test for Youth (ASSIST-Y) at pre- and post-treatment, and at three-month follow-up. Residential treatment was 45 days for children and 180 days for adolescents and consisted of a comprehensive psychosocial intervention that included education, life skills, individual and group counseling and, for older adolescents, vocational skills such as embroidery and tailoring. Girls and boys were significantly different regarding lifetime use of five substances at treatment entry, with girls less likely than boys to have used tobacco, cannabis, stimulants, and alcohol, and girls more likely than boys to have used sedatives. Differences between boys and girls were found for past-three-month use of four substances at treatment entry, with girls entering treatment with higher past-three-month use of opioids and sedatives, and boys with higher past-three-month use of tobacco, cannabis, and alcohol. Change over the course of treatment showed a general decline for both girls and boys in the use of these substances. Girls and boys in Afghanistan come to treatment with different substance use histories and differences in past-three-month use. Treatment of children for substance use problems must be sensitive to possible differences between girls and boys in substance use history.
- Published
- 2020
12. Assessment of a portable quadrupole-based gas chromatography mass spectrometry for seized drug analysis
- Author
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Thom Browne, Taís Regina Fiorentin, David M. Martin, Barry K. Logan, and Eric F. Rieders
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Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Illicit Drugs ,Codeine ,Reproducibility of Results ,Metamizole ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Benzocaine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Forensic Toxicology ,Phenacetin ,Limit of Detection ,medicine ,Humans ,Drug analysis ,Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry ,Ephedrine ,Drug Contamination ,Law ,Furanylfentanyl ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The cutting agents, classified as diluents (pharmacologically inactive) or adulterants (pharmacologically active), are substances commonly used to cut drugs of abuse to increase profits. These substances are constantly changing over time, increasing the risks to the user's health caused by the compounds' potential individual toxicities as well as their drug-drug interactions. This work aimed to develop and validate a screening method using a portable quadrupole-based gas chromatography mass spectrometer (FLIR Griffin™ G510) to identify drugs of abuse and adulterants in seized material, and compare it with a well validated standard technology, gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC-MS). The method was validated for the identification of alprazolam, amphetamine, aminopyrine, benzocaine, caffeine, cocaine, codeine, diltiazem, ephedrine, fentanyl, fenethylline, furanylfentanyl, heroin, hydroxyzine, levamisole, lidocaine, methamphetamine, morphine, noramidopyrine (a marker of metamizole), phencyclidine, phenacetin, procaine, strychnine and xylazine. The targeted substances were chosen based on current intelligence regarding prevalent adulterants observed in multiple jurisdictions. Interference, precision, robustness and carryover were evaluated. The method was successfully validated and proved to be suitable to detect and identify the 24 target compounds proposed. The reliability of the instrument for detecting the presence of targeted compounds was analyzed by using Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) analysis. The portable quadrupole-based gas chromatography mass spectrometer was considered suitable for use in forensic analysis as a screening method.
- Published
- 2020
13. Detection of Cutting Agents in Drug‐Positive Seized Exhibits within the United States
- Author
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Jeremy S. Triplett, Alex J Krotulski, Barry K. Logan, Taís Regina Fiorentin, David M. Martin, Thom Browne, and Trisha Conti
- Subjects
Drug ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Kentucky ,01 natural sciences ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Heroin ,Fentanyl ,03 medical and health sciences ,Procaine ,0302 clinical medicine ,Caffeine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,030216 legal & forensic medicine ,Acetaminophen ,media_common ,Quinine ,Traditional medicine ,Illicit Drugs ,business.industry ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Levamisole ,Quinidine ,0104 chemical sciences ,Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry ,Drug Contamination ,business ,Chromatography, Liquid ,Vermont ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The following report summarizes a study performed on seized drug exhibits collected in two U.S. states to evaluate the presence and identification of cutting agents. Aliquots of seized drug materials from Kentucky (n = 200) and Vermont (n = 315) were prepared using a dilute-and-shoot procedure. Initial analysis was performed using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) followed by analysis using liquid chromatography quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry (LC-QTOF). Active compounds detected overall included caffeine (31.0%), quinine/quinidine (24.7%), levamisole (11.6%), acetaminophen, (8.2%) and procaine (8.2%). These compounds were found with several drugs of abuse, such as heroin, fentanyl, methamphetamine, and cocaine. This novel information about cutting agents used to dilute or alter drugs of abuse is important to criminal investigations and in the management of acute intoxications at health centers. However, common methodologies for analysis and standard reporting practices frequently do not include cutting agents, resulting in lacking or inadequate information regarding prevalence of these substances.
- Published
- 2018
14. Examining human rights and mental health among women in drug abuse treatment centers in Afghanistan
- Author
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Melissa H. Abadi, Linda Young, Matthew W. Courser, Stephen R. Shamblen, Thom Browne, Knowlton Johnson, Kirsten Thompson, and Jude Vanderhoff
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,International Journal of Women's Health ,human rights ,Afghan ,Denial ,Maternity and Midwifery ,medicine ,education ,Psychiatry ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,media_common ,Original Research ,education.field_of_study ,Human rights ,business.industry ,Afghanistan ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,drug abuse treatment ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,Substance abuse ,Oncology ,Marital status ,women ,business ,mental health - Abstract
Melissa Harris Abadi1, Stephen R Shamblen1, Knowlton Johnson1, Kirsten Thompson1, Linda Young1, Matthew Courser1, Jude Vanderhoff1, Thom Browne21Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation – Louisville Center, Louisville, KY, USA; 2United States Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement, Washington, DC, USAAbstract: Denial of human rights, gender disparities, and living in a war zone can be associated with severe depression and poor social functioning, especially for female drug abusers. This study of Afghan women in drug abuse treatment (DAT) centers assesses (a) the extent to which these women have experienced human rights violations and mental health problems prior to entering the DAT centers, and (b) whether there are specific risk factors for human rights violations among this population. A total of 176 in-person interviews were conducted with female patients admitted to three drug abuse treatment centers in Afghanistan in 2010. Nearly all women (91%) reported limitations with social functioning. Further, 41% of the women indicated they had suicide ideation and 27% of the women had attempted suicide at least once 30 days prior to entering the DAT centers due to feelings of sadness or hopelessness. Half of the women (50%) experienced at least one human rights violation in the past year prior to entering the DAT centers. Risk factors for human rights violations among this population include marital status, ethnicity, literacy, employment status, entering treatment based on one’s own desire, limited social functioning, and suicide attempts. Conclusions stemming from the results are discussed.Keywords: Afghanistan, women, human rights, mental health, drug abuse treatment
- Published
- 2012
15. Little Fly Wing: a new drug of concern in Argentina
- Author
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Hendrée E, Jones, Rocio, Suarez Ordoñez, and Thom, Browne
- Subjects
Cocaine ,Illicit Drugs ,Argentina ,Humans ,Phenacetin - Published
- 2015
16. Gender differences in Afghan drug-abuse treatment: an assessment of treatment entry characteristics, dropout, and outcomes
- Author
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Stephen R. Shamblen, Melissa H. Abadi, Kirsten Thompson, Thom Browne, Linda Young, Knowlton Johnson, and Matthew Courser
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Adult ,Male ,Patient Dropouts ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Treatment entry ,Patient characteristics ,Treatment dropout ,Afghan ,Sex Factors ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,mental disorders ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Dropout (neural networks) ,Social functioning ,Models, Statistical ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Afghanistan ,Health Status Disparities ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Substance abuse ,Treatment Outcome ,Female ,Substance Abuse Treatment Centers ,business ,Clinical psychology ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
The current study examines gender differences in drug-abuse treatment (DAT) entry, dropout, and outcomes in seven DAT centers in Afghanistan. This is the first study to examine gender differences in DAT programming in Afghanistan.A prospective cohort design of 504 women and men in seven DAT centers in Afghanistan was used in this study and the analyses examined whether gender differences exist for patients (1) at treatment entry, (2) at treatment dropout, and (3) for treatment outcomes.Gender differences were found at baseline for patient characteristics, drug use, crime, and social and occupational functioning. Results showed a trend that women remained in treatment longer than men. Looking at gender differences in treatment success, results showed greater reductions in drug use and crime, and greater social functioning among women.Results provide preliminary evidence for potential treatment success of women-tailored DAT programming in Afghanistan. Results also indicate that DAT appears to be successful among Afghan men; however, lower positive outcomes for men when compared to women suggest that more efforts should focus on tailoring DAT programming to the specific needs of Afghan men as well. Study limitations are addressed, and important policy implications are discussed.
- Published
- 2014
17. Little Fly Wing: a new drug of concern in Argentina
- Author
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Rocio M Suarez Ordoñez, Thom Browne, and Hendrée E. Jones
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Adulterant ,Drug ,Wing ,Traditional medicine ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Toxicology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Phenacetin ,Medicine ,business ,medicine.drug ,media_common - Published
- 2015
18. Evaluation of the therapeutic community treatment model in Thailand: policy implications for compulsory and prison-based treatment
- Author
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Khun Warunee Chookhare, Thom Browne, Stephen R. Shamblen, Knowlton Johnson, Linda Young, and Geetha Suresh
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,Substance-Related Disorders ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Prison-based treatment ,Prevalence ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Prison ,Public Policy ,Mandatory Programs ,Interview data ,Drug user ,Cohort Studies ,Young Adult ,Quality of life ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,Therapeutic Community ,media_common ,business.industry ,Therapeutic community ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Middle Aged ,Models, Theoretical ,Thailand ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Prisons ,Female ,Self Report ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
This study, conducted in 2005 to 2007, presents results that are based on a proscriptive cohort design. The sample consisted of 769 residents in 22 drug user treatment programs who stayed in treatment for at least 30 days to one year; 510 former residents (66%) from 21 programs (95%) were interviewed again at a 6-month post-treatment follow-up assessment. A majority of the participants were male, lived with family or relatives, had completed only primary school, and had a full-time or a part-time job prior to entering treatment. The participating therapeutic community (TC) programs were a mixture of volunteer, compulsory-probation, and prison-based programs. In-person interview data and urine testing showed that the self-reported drug use prevalence rates are reliable. The results show large positive treatment effects on 30-day and 6-month illegal drug use and small to medium effects on the severity of alcohol use and related problems. A multilevel regression analysis suggests that residents' reduced stigma, adaptation of the TC model, and frequency of alcohol and drug use-related consequences partially predict treatment success. Study limitations and policy implications are discussed.
- Published
- 2012
19. Therapeutic community drug treatment success in Peru: a follow-up outcome study
- Author
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Linda Young, Thom Browne, Geetha Suresh, Zhenfeng Pan, Ken Linfield, Steve Shamblen, Knowlton Johnson, and Jude Vanderhoff
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Social pathology. Social and public welfare. Criminology ,Adolescent ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Stigma (botany) ,lcsh:HV1-9960 ,Interviews as Topic ,Young Adult ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Peru ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Young adult ,Psychiatry ,Therapeutic Community ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Research ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Health Policy ,Public health ,Therapeutic community ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,Retrospective cohort study ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Substance abuse ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Health psychology ,Female ,Substance Abuse Treatment Centers ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of drug abuse treatment in Peru that used the therapeutic community (TC) model. Program directors and several staff members from all study treatment facilities received two to eight weeks of in-country training on how to implement the TC treatment model prior to the follow-up study. Methods This outcome study involved 33 TC treatment facilities and 509 former clients in Lima and other cities in five providences across Peru. A retrospective pre-test (RPT) follow-up design was employed in which 30-day use of illegal drugs and alcohol to intoxication was measured at baseline retrospectively, at the same time of the six-month follow-up. In-person interview data were collected from directors of 73 percent of the eligible TC organizations in January and February 2003 and from former 58 percent of the eligible TC former clients between October 2003 and October 2004. Drug testing was conducted on a small sample of former clients to increase the accuracy of the self-reported drug use data. Results Medium to large positive treatment effects were found when comparing 30-day illegal drug and alcohol use to intoxication before and six months after receiving treatment. As a supplemental analysis, we assumed the 42 percent of the former clients who were not interviewed at the six month assessment had returned to drugs. These results showed medium treatment effects as well. Hierarchical Generalized Linear Modeling (HGLM) results showed higher implementation fidelity, less stigma after leaving treatment, and older clients, singly or in combination are key predictors of treatment success. Conclusion This study found that former clients of drug and alcohol treatment in facilities using the TC model reported substantial positive change in use of illegal drugs and alcohol to intoxication at a six-month follow-up. The unique contribution of this study is that the results also suggest attention should be placed on the importance of implementing the TC drug abuse treatment model with fidelity. Further, the results strongly suggest that TC drug abuse treatment programs should incorporate follow-up activities that attempt to neutralize community negative reactions (perceived stigma) independent of other factors.
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- 2008
20. Building an Evidence Base for Drug Abuse Treatment in Afghanistan: Lessons Learned and Implications for Future Research
- Author
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Matthew W. Courser, Melissa H. Abadi, Stephen R. Shamblen, Linda Young, Kirsten Thompson, Thom Browne, and Knowlton Johnson
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Addiction ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Prevalence ,Detoxification Process ,Retention rate ,medicine.disease ,Substance abuse ,Afghan ,medicine ,Oral fluid ,Prospective cohort study ,Psychiatry ,business ,media_common - Abstract
Introduction Although, drug addiction is well documented in Afghanistan, organised drug abuse treatment (DAT) has been limited there until recently, and no evaluation studies of DAT outcomes in Afghanistan have been conducted. In response to this need, a feasibility study was conducted between October 2009 and January 2012 to evaluate the drug abuse treatment (DAT) model being implemented in Afghanistan, by the Colombo Plan for Cooperative Economic and Social Development in Asia and the Pacific (CPDAP).1 Two research questions are addressed by the evaluation study: Q1. What is the pre-post change in treatment outcomes (drug use and criminal behaviour) for patients in the participating Afghan DAT Centers? Q2. What factors explain changes in these outcomes? Methods A prospective cohort design was used to examine change in treatment outcomes in seven Afghan DAT centers that operate using the CPDAP treatment model. Four centers served males and three served females. A total of 504 in-person baseline interviews were conducted within 0 to 5 days of patients completing their detoxification process in the DAT centers. Baseline interviews were completed with 326 males and 178 females. On average, upon entry, male patients were 30.7 years old and female patients were 38.8 years old. Because the CPDAP treatment lasted up to 10 days of detox, 30-45 days of inpatient treatment, and 12 months of outpatient treatment, in-person post-test interviews were conducted 12 months after patients completed inpatient treatment. A total of 353 in person post-test interviews were conducted 13.5 months after DAT entry, yielding a 70% study retention rate. Results The study found that participation in DAT resulted in statistically significant decreases, in past 30-day use of any illegal drug, opiates, and alcohol. The results also showed statistically significant reductions, in the frequency of self-reported crime-related behaviour among patients from baseline to post-test. Finally, the study also found that completion of the first year of outpatient treatment, and completion of prior drug treatment predicted larger treatment effects. Discussion The findings of the present study suggest that DAT is effective in Afghanistan. As we have found that completion of the first year of outpatient treatment predicted positive treatment outcomes, DAT centers need to continue their emphasis on ensuring that patients complete both inpatient and outpatient treatment. Our findings also suggest that drug testing - utilising newer technologies such as oral fluid assays - should be used at both pre-test and post-test to ensure accurate prevalence rates and to eliminate problems with false positives. Future studies will benefit from additional training of DAT center staff on how to collect treatment dosage information. Finally, future studies should consider the use of a comparison or control group to increase confidence that CPDAP treatment was the major cause of reductions in the prevalence of drug use and criminal behaviour. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.4038/ijptsud.v1i1.5908 International Journal of Prevention and Treatment of Substance Use Disorder Vol.1(1) 2013: 12-27
- Published
- 2013
21. Drug use and treatment success among gang and non-gang members in El Salvador: a prospective cohort study
- Author
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Thom Browne, Melissa H. Abadi, Knowlton Johnson, Linda Young, Stephen R. Shamblen, and Matthew W. Courser
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Alcohol Drinking ,Cross-sectional study ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Poison control ,Peer Group ,Cohort Studies ,Outcome evaluation ,Drug abuse treatment ,Risk Factors ,Injury prevention ,Juvenile delinquency ,El Salvador ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Psychiatry ,Aged ,business.industry ,Illicit Drugs ,Health Policy ,Research ,Peer group ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Substance abuse ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Treatment Outcome ,Gangs ,Juvenile Delinquency ,Linear Models ,Dual diagnosis ,Female ,Crime ,Substance Abuse Treatment Centers ,business ,Cohort study ,Program Evaluation - Abstract
Background This article focuses on examining drug abuse treatment (DAT) in El Salvador highlighting gang vs. non-gang membership differences in drug use and treatment outcomes. Methods Cross-sectional and prospective cohort designs were employed to examine the study aims. The 19 centers that met the study’s inclusion criteria of one year or less in planned treatment offered varying treatment services: individual, group, family, and vocational therapy, dual diagnosis treatment, psychological testing, 12-step program, and outreach and re-entry aftercare. Most directors describe their treatment approach as “spiritual.” Data were collected from 625 patients, directors, and staff from the 19 centers at baseline, of which 34 patients were former gang members. Seventy-two percent (72%) of the former patients (448) were re-interviewed six-months after leaving treatment and 48% were randomly tested for drug use. Results Eighty-nine percent (89%) of the DAT patients at baseline were classified as heavy alcohol users and 40% were using illegal drugs, i.e., crack, marijuana, cocaine, tranquilizers, opiates, and amphetamines. There were large decreases after treatment in heavy alcohol and illegal drug use, crime, and gang related risk activities. Gang members reported illegal drug use, crime, and gang related risk activity more than non-gang members, yet only 5% of the study participants were gang members; further, positive change in treatment outcomes among gang members were the same or larger as compared to non-gang members. Conclusions Alcohol use is the drug of choice among DAT patients in El Salvador with gang member patients having used illegal drugs more than non-gang members. The study shows that DAT centers successfully reduced the use of illegal drugs and alcohol among gang and non-gang members. Although our study could not include a control group, we believe that the DAT treatment centers in El Salvador contributed to producing this treatment success among former patients. These efforts should be continued and complemented by funding support from the Salvadoran government for DAT centers that obtain certification. In addition, tailored/alternative treatment modalities are needed for gang members in treatment for heavy drinking.
- Published
- 2013
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