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Long-term Abstinence and Well-being of Alcohol-dependent Patients after Intensive Treatment and Aftercare Telephone Contacts

Maja Rus-Makovec ; Centre for Alcohol Addiction Treatment University Psychiatric Hospital Ljubljana, Slovenia
Zdenka Čebašek-Travnik ; Centre for Alcohol Addiction Treatment University Psychiatric Hospital Ljubljana, Slovenia


Puni tekst: engleski pdf 513 Kb

str. 763-771

preuzimanja: 724

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Sažetak

Aim To identify whether intensive treatment and aftercare telephone
contacts influence long-term abstinence and well-being of patients with alcohol dependency. Methods Six hundred and twenty two patients were evaluated at the beginning and end of intensive in-patient treatment. At the end of the treatment, the patients were divided into two recruitment cohorts – telephone contact group (n = 347), in whom basic outcome criteria (abstinence, marital and employment status, self-evaluation of well-being) were evaluated 3, 6, 12, and 24 months after intensive treatment and no contact group (n = 275) in whom the basic outcome criteria were checked only at 24 months after the intensive treatment. At 24 months, response rate was 33.4% in telephone contact group (n = 116) and 30.5% (n = 84) in no contact group. Results Positive indicators of therapy success (abstinence or decrease in drinking, stabile social relations, and more positive self-evaluation of well-being) were found in 53.0% of patients at 3 months, 44.3% at 6 months, and 30.6% at 12 months in telephone contact group. Overall abstinence 24 months after the end of intensive treatment was reported in 25.7% of all patients, including non-respondents. Both groups achieved significant improvement in subjective well-being during intensive treatment. At 24 months, 3 attributes of subjective well-being (subjective psychological
health, evaluation of financial status, general quality of life)
were significantly higher in telephone contact group. However, groups
did not significantly differ in the abstinence level (telephone contact
group = 27.7%, no contact group = 24.4%). Conclusion Significant differences in well-being variables between telephone contact group and no contact group at 24 months after the end of intensive treatment are at least partially due to phone contact/informative
checking 3, 6, and 12 months after the end of intensive therapy.
Telephone or any short and easy accessible communication checking is a promising as supportive and research tool in aftercare alcohol addiction treatment, especially because of its cost-benefit advantages.

Ključne riječi

treatment outcome; alcohol dependency; well-being; aftercare; telephone intervention

Hrčak ID:

35112

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/35112

Datum izdavanja:

15.12.2008.

Posjeta: 1.302 *