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[Relapse prevention program consisting of coping skills training, cue exposure treatment, and letter therapy for Japanese alcoholic men who relapsed after standard cognitive-behavioral therapy]

Authors :
Akira, Yokoyama
Sachio, Matsushita
Tomomi, Toyama
Hideki, Nakayama
Tsuyoshi, Takimura
Mitsuru, Kimura
Junichi, Yoneda
Hitoshi, Maesato
Takeshi, Mizukami
Susumu, Higuchi
Tetsuji, Yokoyama
Source :
Nihon Arukoru Yakubutsu Igakkai zasshi = Japanese journal of alcohol studiesdrug dependence. 50(2)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Coping skills training (CST) and cue exposure treatment (CET) have yielded favorable outcomes when used to treat alcoholics. We conducted 6-week inpatient programs that consisted of 9 CST group sessions (n = 117) during 2005-2009 and 9 CST group sessions plus 4 CET group sessions (n = 49) during 2009-2011 and subsequent 1-year letter therapy for Japanese alcoholic men who had relapsed and been readmitted after standard cognitive-behavioral inpatient therapy. When patients received a letter containing encouraging words every 2 weeks, they were asked to reread their CST and CET records and to respond to the letter by marking drinking days on a calendar and naming the skills on a list of the 9 CST themes and CET that were useful for maintaining abstinence during that 2-week period. The estimated percentages of achievement of 30 or fewer drinking days during the one year of letter therapy were 36.1 - 45.8%. 'Non-smoking', '2nd admission', and 'After age-limit job retirement' were significant factors in achieving good outcomes. The 'usefulness' responses for 'Increasing pleasant activities', 'CET', 'Anger management', ' Managing negative thinking', 'Problem solving', and ' Seemingly irrelevant decisions' as percentages of overall responses to the letters were significantly higher, in order of decreasing percentages, in the achiever group than in the non-achiever group, but the differences between the groups in ' Managing urges to drink', ' Drink refusal skills', ' Planning for emergencies', and ' Receiving criticism about drinking' were not significant. The odds ratios for achievement of 30 or fewer drinking days during the 1-year period increased significantly by 1.15 -1.31 fold per 10% increment in the 'usefulness' ratio for 'Increasing pleasant activities'. The difference in percentage achievement between the group treated by CST alone and the group treated by CST plus CET was not significant. In conclusion, some coping skills were more useful for relapse prevention than others in this study population, and addition of CET to CST and subsequent letter therapy did not improve outcomes.

Details

ISSN :
13418963
Volume :
50
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nihon Arukoru Yakubutsu Igakkai zasshi = Japanese journal of alcohol studiesdrug dependence
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........e8f6fc645992b566be80fde4eb8fd903