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Journal Article

Citation

Kaskutas LA, Witbrodt J, Grella CE. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2015; 154: 85-92.

Affiliation

Integrated Substance Abuse Programs, University of California Los Angeles, 11075 Santa Monica Boulevard, Suite 100, Los Angeles, CA, 90025, USA. Electronic address: cgrella@ucla.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2015.06.021

PMID

26166666

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The term "recovery" is widely used in the substance abuse literature and clinical settings, but data have not been available to empirically validate how recovery is defined by individuals who are themselves in recovery. The "What Is Recovery?" project developed a 39-item definition of recovery based on a large nationwide online survey of individuals in recovery. The objective of this paper is to report on the stability of those definitions one to two years later.

METHODS: To obtain a sample for studying recovery definitions that reflected the different pathways to recovery, the parent study involved intensive outreach. Follow-up interviews (n=1237) were conducted online and by telephone among respondents who consented to participate in follow-up studies. Descriptive analyses considered endorsement of individual recovery items at both surveys, and t-tests of summary scores studied significant change in the sample overall and among key subgroups. To assess item reliability, Cronbach's alpha was estimated.

RESULTS: Rates of endorsement of individual items at both interviews was above 90% for a majority of the recovery elements, and there was about as much transition into endorsement as out of endorsement. Statistically significant t-test scores were of modest magnitude, and reliability statistics were high (ranging from.782 to.899).

CONCLUSIONS: Longitudinal analyses found little evidence of meaningful change in recovery definitions at follow-up.

RESULTS thus suggest that the recovery definitions developed in the parent "What Is Recovery?" survey represent stable definitions of recovery that can be used to guide service provision in Recovery-Oriented Systems of Care.


Language: en

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