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Journal Article

Citation

Teesson M, Ross J, Darke S, Lynskey M, Ali R, Ritter A, Cooke R. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2006; 83(2): 174-180.

Affiliation

National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, University of New South Wales, NSW, Australia. m.teesson@unsw.edu.au

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2005.11.009

PMID

16343809

Abstract

AIM: To determine 1 year outcomes for drug use, criminality, psychopathology and injection-related health problems in those entering treatment for heroin dependence in Australia. DESIGN: Longitudinal prospective cohort study. PARTICIPANTS: Seven hundred and forty five individuals entering treatment (methadone/buprenorphine maintenance therapy; detoxification; residential rehabilitation) and 80 heroin users not seeking treatment. SETTING: Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide, Australia. FINDINGS: A total of 657 individuals were re-interviewed at 1 year, 80% of the original sample. There were substantial reductions in heroin and other drug use across all three treatment modalities. The majority of those who had entered treatment were heroin abstinent at 1 year (maintenance therapy 65%, detoxification 52%, residential rehabilitation 63%) compared to 25% of the non-treatment sample. The reduction in heroin use among the treatment samples was paralleled by reductions in poly drug use. There were also substantial reductions in risk-taking, crime and injection-related health problems across all treatment groups, and less marked reductions among the non-treatment group. Psychopathology was dramatically reduced among the treatment modalities, while remaining stable among the non-treatment group. Positive outcomes at 1 year were associated with a greater number of cumulative treatment days experienced over the 1 year follow-up period ('treatment dose') and fewer treatment episodes undertaken in that time ('treatment stability'). CONCLUSIONS: At 1 year, there were impressive reductions in drug use, criminality, psychopathology and injection-related health problems following treatment exposure. The positive findings were associated with a greater"dose"of treatment, and with more treatment stability over the follow-up period.


Language: en

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