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Posttreatment Low-Risk Drinking as a Predictor of Future Drinking and Problem Outcomes Among Individuals with Alcohol Use Disorders: A 9-Year Follow-Up.
- Source :
- Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research; Mar2017, Vol. 41 Issue 3, p653-658, 6p
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Background Treatment for alcohol use disorders (AUDs) has traditionally been abstinence oriented, but new research and regulatory guidelines suggest that low-risk drinking may also be an acceptable treatment outcome. However, little is known about long-term outcomes for patients who become low-risk drinkers posttreatment. This study explores a posttreatment low-risk drinking outcome as a predictor of future drinking and psychosocial outcomes over 9 years. Methods Study participants were adults with AUDs at treatment entry who received follow-up interviews 6 months posttreatment intake ( N = 1,061) in 2 large randomized studies conducted at Kaiser Permanente Northern California, a large private, nonprofit, integrated health system. Six-month drinking status was defined as abstinent, low-risk (nonabstinent, no 5+ drinking days), or heavy drinking (1 or more days of 5+ drinks). Using logistic regression models, we explored the relationship between past 30-day drinking status at 6 months and odds of being abstinent or a low-risk drinker (compared to heavy drinking), and positive Addiction Severity Index psychosocial outcomes over 9 years (9-year follow-up rate of 73%). Results Abstainers and low-risk drinkers at 6 months had higher odds of recent abstinence/low-risk drinking over 9 years than heavy drinkers; abstainers had better drinking outcomes than low-risk drinkers. Additionally, among those with interview data, 95% of abstainers and 94% of low-risk drinkers at 6 months were abstinent/low-risk drinkers at 9 years; surprisingly, 89% of heavy drinkers at 6 months were also abstinent/low-risk drinkers although still significantly fewer than the other groups. Abstainers and low-risk drinkers at 6 months had better psychiatric outcomes, and abstainers had better family/social outcomes than heavy drinkers; medical outcomes did not differ. Low-risk drinkers and abstainers showed no reliable differences across psychosocial measures. Conclusions The findings suggest that a low-risk drinking outcome may be reasonable over the long-term for some alcohol-dependent individuals receiving addiction treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- DISEASE relapse
CONVALESCENCE
ALCOHOL-induced disorders
ALCOHOLISM
ANALYSIS of variance
CHI-squared test
COMPULSIVE behavior
CONFIDENCE intervals
DRINKING behavior
ALCOHOL drinking
FAMILIES
FORECASTING
LONGITUDINAL method
PROBABILITY theory
QUESTIONNAIRES
RESEARCH
RESEARCH funding
STATISTICS
LOGISTIC regression analysis
DATA analysis
SOCIAL support
SOCIAL context
TREATMENT effectiveness
REPEATED measures design
DATA analysis software
DESCRIPTIVE statistics
ALCOHOLIC intoxication
ODDS ratio
THERAPEUTICS
PSYCHOLOGY
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Volume :
- 41
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- Complementary Index
- Journal :
- Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 121503115
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1111/acer.13334