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cont. from
General Categories of Drug Treatment Programs
• Agonist Maintenance Treatment
for opiate addicts usually is conducted in outpatient settings, often called
methadone treatment programs. These programs use a long-acting synthetic opiate
medication, usually methadone or LAAM, administered orally for a sustained
period at a dosage sufficient to prevent opiate withdrawal, block the effects of
illicit opiate use, and decrease opiate craving. Patients stabilized on
adequate, sustained dosages of methadone or LAAM can function normally. They can
hold jobs, avoid the crime and violence of the street culture, and reduce their
exposure to HIV by stopping or decreasing injection drug use and drug-related
high-risk sexual behavior.
Patients stabilized on opiate agonists can engage more readily in counseling
and other behavioral interventions essential to recovery and rehabilitation. The
best, most effective opiate agonist maintenance programs include individual
and/or group counseling, as well as provision of, or referral to, other needed
medical, psychological, and social services.
| Patients stabilized on adequate sustained dosages of methadone or
LAAM can function normally. |
Further Reading:
Ball, J.C., and Ross, A. The Effectiveness of Methadone Treatment. New York:
Springer-Verlag, 1991.
Cooper, J.R. Ineffective use of psychoactive drugs; Methadone treatment is no
exception. JAMA Jan 8; 267(2): 281-282, 1992.
Dole, V.P.; Nyswander, M.; and Kreek, M.J. Narcotic Blockade. Archives of
Internal Medicine 118: 304-309, 1996.
Lowinson, J.H.; Payte, J.T.; Joseph, H.; Marion, I.J.; and Dole, V.P.
Methadone Maintenance. In: Lowinson, J.H.; Ruiz, P.; Millman, R.B.; and Langrod,
J.G., eds. Substance Abuse: A Comprehensive Textbook. Baltimore, MD, Lippincott,
Williams & Wilkins, 1996, pp. 405-414.
McLellan, A.T.; Arndt, I.O.; Metzger, D.S.; Woody, G.E.; and O'Brien, C.P.
The effects of psychosocial services in substance abuse treatment. JAMA Apr 21;
269(15): 1953-1959, 1993.
Novick, D.M.; Joseph, J.; Croxson, T.S., et al. Absence of antibody to human
immunodeficiency virus in long-term, socially rehabilitated methadone
maintenance patients. Archives of Internal Medicine Jan; 150(1): 97-99, 1990.
Simpson, D.D.; Joe, G.W.; and Bracy, S.A. Six-year follow-up of opioid
addicts after admission to treatment. Archives of General Psychiatry Nov;
39(11): 1318-1323, 1982.
Simpson, D.D. Treatment for drug abuse; Follow-up outcomes and length of time
spent. Archives of General Psychiatry 38(8): 875-880, 1981.
• Narcotic Antagonist Treatment Using
Naltrexone for opiate addicts usually is conducted in outpatient settings
although initiation of the medication often begins after medical detoxification
in a residential setting. Naltrexone is a long-acting synthetic opiate
antagonist with few side effects that is taken orally either daily or three
times a week for a sustained period of time. Individuals must be medically
detoxified and opiate-free for several days before naltrexone can be taken to
prevent precipitating an opiate abstinence syndrome. When used this way, all the
effects of self-administered opiates, including euphoria, are completely
blocked. The theory behind this treatment is that the repeated lack of the
desired opiate effects, as well as the perceived futility of using the opiate,
will gradually over time result in breaking the habit of opiate addiction.
Naltrexone itself has no subjective effects or potential for abuse and is not
addicting. Patient noncompliance is a common problem. Therefore, a favorable
treatment outcome requires that there also be a positive therapeutic
relationship, effective counseling or therapy, and careful monitoring of
medication compliance.
| Patients stabilized on naltrexone can hold jobs, avoid crime and
violence, and reduce their exposure to HIV. |
Many experienced clinicians have found naltrexone most useful for highly
motivated, recently detoxified patients who desire total abstinence because of
external circumstances, including impaired professionals, parolees,
probationers, and prisoners in work-release status. Patients stabilized on
naltrexone can function normally. They can hold jobs, avoid the crime and
violence of the street culture, and reduce their exposure to HIV by stopping
injection drug use and drug-related high-risk sexual behavior.
Further Reading:
Cornish, J.W.; Metzger, D.; Woody, G.E.; Wilson, D.; McLellan, A.T.;
Vandergrift, B.; and O'Brien, C.P. Naltrexone pharmacotherapy for opioid
dependent federal probationers. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment 14(6):
529-534, 1997.
Greenstein, R.A.; Arndt, I.C.; McLellan, A.T.; and O'Brien, C.P. Naltrexone:
a clinical perspective. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 45 (9 Part 2): 25-28,
1984.
Resnick, R.B.; Schuyten-Resnick, E.; and Washton, A.M. Narcotic antagonists
in the treatment of opioid dependence: review and commentary. Comprehensive
Psychiatry 20(2): 116-125, 1979.
Resnick, R.B. and Washton, A.M. Clinical outcome with naltrexone: predictor
variables and followup status in detoxified heroin addicts. Annals of the New
York Academy of Sciences 311: 241-246, 1978.
• Outpatient Drug-Free Treatment
in the types and intensity of services offered. Such treatment costs less than
residential or inpatient treatment and often is more suitable for individuals
who are employed or who have extensive social supports. Low-intensity programs
may offer little more than drug education and admonition. Other outpatient
models, such as intensive day treatment, can be comparable to residential
programs in services and effectiveness, depending on the individual patient's
characteristics and needs. In many outpatient programs, group counseling is
emphasized. Some outpatient programs are designed to treat patients who have
medical or mental health problems in addition to their drug disorder.
Further Reading:
Higgins, S.T.; Budney, A.J.; Bickel, W.K.; Foerg, F.E.; Donham, R.; and
Badger, G.J. Incentives to improve outcome in outpatient behavioral treatment of
cocaine dependence. Archives of General Psychiatry 51, 568-576, 1994.
Hubbard, R.L.; Craddock, S.G.; Flynn, P.M.; Anderson, J.; and Etheridge, R.M.
Overview of 1-year follow-up outcomes in the Drug Abuse Treatment Outcome Study
(DATOS). Psychology of Addictive Behaviors 11(4): 291-298, 1998.
Institute of Medicine. Treating Drug Problems. Washington, D.C.: National
Academy Press, 1990.
McLellan, A.T.; Grisson, G.; Durell, J.; Alterman, A.I.; Brill, P.; and
O'Brien, C.P. Substance abuse treatment in the private setting: Are some
programs more effective than others? Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment 10,
243-254, 1993.
Simpson, D.D. and Brown, B.S. Treatment retention and follow-up outcomes in
the Drug Abuse Treatment Outcome Study (DATOS). Psychology of Addictive
Behaviors 11(4): 294-307, 1998.
• Long-Term Residential Treatment
provides care 24 hours per day, generally in nonhospital settings. The
best-known residential treatment model is the therapeutic community (TC), but
residential treatment may also employ other models, such as cognitive-behavioral
therapy.
TCs are residential programs with planned lengths of stay of 6 to 12 months.
TCs focus on the "resocialization" of the individual and use the program's
entire "community," including other residents, staff, and the social context, as
active components of treatment. Addiction is viewed in the context of an
individual's social and psychological deficits, and treatment focuses on
developing personal accountability and responsibility and socially productive
lives. Treatment is highly structured and can at times be confrontational, with
activities designed to help residents examine damaging beliefs, self-concepts,
and patterns of behavior and to adopt new, more harmonious and constructive ways
to interact with others. Many TCs are quite comprehensive and can include
employment training and other support services on site.
| Therapeutic communities focus on the "resocialization" of the
individual and use the program's entire "community" as active components
of treatment. |
Compared with patients in other forms of drug treatment, the typical TC
resident has more severe problems, with more co-occurring mental health problems
and more criminal involvement. Research shows that TCs can be modified to treat
individuals with special needs, including adolescents, women, those with severe
mental disorders, and individuals in the criminal justice system (see
Treating Criminal Justice-Involved Drug
Abusers and Addicts ).
Further Reading:
Leukefeld, C.; Pickens, R.; and Schuster, C.R. Improving drug abuse
treatment: Recommendations for research and practice. In: Pickens, R.W.;
Luekefeld, C.G.; and Schuster, C.R., eds. Improving Drug Abuse Treatment,
National Institute on Drug Abuse Research Monograph Series, DHHS Pub No. (ADM)
91-1754, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1991.
Lewis, B.F.; McCusker, J.; Hindin, R.; Frost, R.; and Garfield, F. Four
residential drug treatment programs: Project IMPACT. In: Inciardi, J.A.; Tims,
F.M.; and Fletcher, B.W. eds. Innovative Approaches in the Treatment of Drug
Abuse. Westport, CN: Greenwood Press, 1993, pp. 45-60.
Sacks, S.; Sacks, J.; DeLeon, G.; Bernhardt, A.; and Staines, G. Modified
therapeutic community for mentally ill chemical abusers: Background; influences;
program description; preliminary findings. Substance Use and Misuse 32(9);
1217-1259, 1998.
Stevens, S.J., and Glider, P.J. Therapeutic communities: Substance abuse
treatment for women. In: Tims, F.M.; De Leon, G.; and Jainchill, N., eds.
Therapeutic Community: Advances in Research and Application, National Institute
on Drug Abuse Research Monograph 144, NIH Pub. No. 94-3633, U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1994, pp. 162-180.
Stevens, S.; Arbiter, N.; and Glider, P. Women residents: Expanding their
role to increase treatment effectiveness in substance abuse programs.
International Journal of the Addictions 24(5): 425-434, 1989.
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