Client consensus on beliefs about abstinence: Effects on substance abuse treatment outcomes
Drug and Alcohol Dependence Article in Press, 18 October 2007
Organizational culture, as evinced by consensus regarding staff and client beliefs and values, has been shown to affect client engagement in residential substance abuse treatment.
The present paper extends this work to treatment outcomes. Secondary analysis of data from a “Beliefs About Abstinence Scale,” used in the Drug Abuse Treatment Outcomes Study (DATOS), was conducted for 76 programs, including outpatient methadone treatment, outpatient drug-free, short-term inpatient, and long-term residential programs.
Findings show that higher levels of client consensus after 1 month of treatment were associated with less use of drugs and alcohol at 1-year follow-up, after controlling for the mean of the scale score, gender, age, client substance use at baseline and treatment modality.
The implications of the results for substance abuse treatment are discussed.
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For full versions of posted research articles readers are encouraged to email requests for "electronic reprints" (text file, PDF files, FAX copies) to the corresponding or lead author, who is highlighted in the posting.
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