Slide 1 of 20 Overview of National Treatment Outcome Studies Charts Prepared & Released for Public Use by Dwayne Simpson (TCU), Robert Hubbard (NDRI-NC),

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
13 Principles of Effective Addictions Treatment
Advertisements

1 Intervening in the Recovery Process Michael L. Dennis, Ph.D. Christy K Scott, Ph.D. Chestnut Health Systems, Bloomington &Chicago, IL U.S.A. Presentation.
Abstract People who enter substance abuse treatment under various degrees of legal pressure do at least as well at the end of treatment or at follow-up.
Principles of Drug Addiction Treatment: What Works with Offenders? Rita Dries July 2006.
+ Overview of Service Categories Under the Ryan White Care Act – Definitions, Integration, and Evaluation HIV Health & Human Services Planning Council.
Comprehensive Children’s Mental Health Act
Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction: What Science Says Developed by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) National Institutes of Health Bethesda,
JANUARY 2013 SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENTBASICS. WHY DO PEOPLE USE DRUGS AND ALCOHOL? People use substances such as alcohol and other drugs because they.
Program Evaluation: Entre Familia. Entre Familia: Program Description  Gender- and culture-specific residential treatment program (6 to 12 months duration,
Early Childhood Mental Health Consultants Early Childhood Consultation Partnership® Funded and Supported by Connecticut’s Department of Children and Families.
Amethyst, Inc. Amethyst exists to nurture and sustain healthy women and families. We have been providing gender specific and trauma informed alcohol, tobacco.
HEALTHRIGHT 360 Residential Problem Gambling Treatment Program.
SUBSTANCE USE DISORDERS GENERAL METHODS OF TREATMENT Inpatient Detoxification and Rehabilitation Outpatient Individual, Couple, or Family Counseling Self-help.
1 One Sky Center: Best Practices in Native Populations R. Dale Walker, MD Patricia Silk Walker, PhD Douglas Bigelow, PhD Bentson McFarland, MD Laura Loudon,
Attractive Addiction Treatment...? Can we make addiction treatment engaging?
1 Advancing Recovery: Baltimore Buprenorphine Initiative Tucson Presentation July 29, 2009 Baltimore Substance Abuse Systems.
1 Data Revolution: National Survey of Child and Adolescent Well-Being (NSCAW) John Landsverk, Ph.D. Child & Adolescent Services Research Center Children’s.
Child and Adolescent Task Force Report Charlotte V. McNulty, Vice Chair Presentation to House Health, Welfare and Institutions General Assembly Building.
OVERVIEW OF KATIE A. SETTLEMENT. WHO IS KATIE A?  year old Caucasian female  Placed in foster care at age 4  Mental health assessment at age.
Suboxone as an Adjunctive Medication, Not Maintenance Dennis M. Donovan, Ph.D. UW Alcohol & Drug Abuse Institute Patricia C. Knox, Ph.D. Recovery Centers.
ILLINOIS STATEWIDE TREATMENT OUTCOMES PROJECT. Illinois Statewide Treatment Outcomes Project Largest evaluation of treatment outcomes by the State to.
Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services Joe Vesowate Assistant Commissioner.
Treatment 101 Substance Abuse Basics West Coast Consulting Wanda King
Louisiana Access to Recovery LA-ATR Understanding Addiction & Supporting Recovery Webinar Pastor Pythian Noah June 25, 2009.
Responding to Drug Abuse and Addiction: What Science Says Developed by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) National Institutes of Health Bethesda,
C:\laam\lamAPA.ppt 8/04/98 Heroin Addiction Treatment: A Comparison of Methadone and LAAM M. Douglas Anglin, Ph.D. Douglas Longshore, Ph.D. Jeffrey J.
Principles of Drug Addiction Treatment (Section 5 continued…) UCLA Integrated Substance Abuse Programs Continuum of Care 1.
American Association for the Treatment of Opioid Dependence, Inc National Conference, Atlanta April 25, 2006 Evaluation of the Impact of Opioid Treatment.
1 The American Indian/Alaska Native National Resource Center for Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Best Practices in Native Communities: Strengthening.
Carver County and Scott County February Children’s Mental Health Case Management seeks to improve the quality of life for children with severe emotional.
Chapter 11 Subset of Overview by Mental Health Disorders GAIN Coordinating Center (11/21/2012). Normal, IL: Chestnut Health Systems. November Available.
Recovery Support Services and Client Outcomes: What do the Data Tell Us? Recovery Community Services Program Grantee Meeting December 14, 2007.
Positive Living Navajo AIDS Network, Inc. Melvin Harrison, Executive Director Marco Arviso, Arizona Medical Case Manager.
1 Therapeutic Community Treatment in Correctional Settings The Call for An Integrated System George De Leon, Ph.D. Center for Therapeutic Community Research.
Managing Hard-to-Manage Patients Sharon Stancliff, MD Medical Consultant New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute New York, NY.
Services for Veterans and Returning Soldiers A Brief Overview of Service Needs, Service Gaps, and Collaborative Efforts for in New York State.
Slide 1 of 14 National Cocaine Treatment Outcomes from DATOS Charts Prepared & Released for Public Use by Dwayne Simpson (TCU), Robert Hubbard (NDRI-NC),
Abstinence Incentives for Methadone Maintained Stimulant Users: Outcomes for Those Testing Stimulant Positive vs Negative at Study Intake Maxine L. Stitzer.
Introduction Results and Conclusions ATR Results: On demographic and social characteristics, ATR completers were more likely to be Hispanic, employed,
Recovery Support Services and Client Outcomes: Results of Two Interim Evaluations in Texas College on Problems of Drug College on Problems of Drug Dependence.
Chapter 15 Subset of Overview by Program GAIN Coordinating Center (11/21/2012). Normal, IL: Chestnut Health Systems. November Available from
Introduction Results and Conclusions On demographic variables, analyses revealed that ATR clients were more likely to be Hispanic and employed, whereas.
Slide 1 of 19 National Treatment Retention Findings from DATOS Charts Prepared & Released for Public Use by Dwayne Simpson (TCU), Robert Hubbard (NDRI-NC),
Treatment for Substance Abusers in the Therapeutic Community.
Chapter 6 Subset of Overview by Gender GAIN Coordinating Center (11/21/2012). Normal, IL: Chestnut Health Systems. November Available from
Chapter 13 Subset of Overview by Crime and Violence GAIN Coordinating Center (11/21/2012). Normal, IL: Chestnut Health Systems. November Available.
Using Decision Support Information to Improve System Performance Peter F. Luongo, Ph.D. March 20, 2008.
1 Addictions and Mental Health Approaches in Native Populations R. Dale Walker, MD Patricia Silk Walker, PhD Douglas Bigelow, PhD Bentson McFarland, MD.
UCLA Integrated Substance Abuse Programs Richard Rawson, Ph.D. Rachel Gonzales, Ph.D. Funded by: California Alcohol and Drug Programs CalOMS Training for.
TREATMENT OF SUBSTANCE USE DISORDERS TX myths 1. Nothing works 2. One approach is superior to all others (“one true light” tradition) 3. All treatment.
Behavioral Health DATA BOOK A quarterly reference to community mental health and substance abuse services Fiscal Year 2015 Quarter 1 March 10, 2015
Chapter 9 Subset of Overview by Risk of Homelessness GAIN Coordinating Center (11/21/2012). Normal, IL: Chestnut Health Systems. November Available.
Chapter 17 Subset of Overview by Type of Treatment GAIN Coordinating Center (11/21/2012). Normal, IL: Chestnut Health Systems. November Available.
Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction: What Science Says Developed by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) National Institutes of Health Bethesda,
Chapter 7 P RACTICE D IMENSION II: T REATMENT P LANNING Contributor: Ben Eiland Lori L. Phelps California Association for Alcohol/Drug Educators, 2015.
Los Angles LGBT Center Noah Kaplan MSW Alex Adame MSW.
Association for Women in Psychology Conference “A Model of Integrated Treatment for Women with Co-Occurring Disorders who are at High Risk for HIV” Presented.
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration Impact of Screening and Brief Intervention Grants in Seven States: Substance Use, Criminal Justice,
Introduction Results and Conclusions Results: On demographic and social characteristics, ATR completers were more likely to be male, Hispanic, employed,
FAMILY RECOVERY NETWORK EVENT: What is Substance Abuse Treatment? Patrick Seche, MS, CASAC Strong Recovery Addiction Psychiatry Division Department of.
Detention to community (DTC): A family-based substance abuse, delinquency treatment and HIV prevention intervention for juvenile offenders Lead Center.
1 Torrance Unified School District Employee Assistance Program (EAP) (800) Up to 3 FREE sessions per problem per person per year Automatic enrollment.
Trends in Access to Substance Abuse Treatment for Women and Men: Jeanne C. Marsh, PhD, Hee-Choon Shin, PhD, Dingcai Cao, PhD University of Chicago.
Here are 6 types of drug treatment center which can help you to get rid of drug addiction 1. Outpatient Treatment.
Public SUD Treatment ●Information on SUD treatment is provided by data that are reported routinely to the national SUD treatment monitoring system known.
Drugs and Neuron Communication
NYSDOH AIDS Institute Quality of Care Program eHIVQUAL
Behavioral Health and Employee Assistance Program
Feedback for Quality Improvement
Prism Health North Texas Programs and Services
Presentation transcript:

Slide 1 of 20 Overview of National Treatment Outcome Studies Charts Prepared & Released for Public Use by Dwayne Simpson (TCU), Robert Hubbard (NDRI-NC), Douglas Anglin (UCLA), & Bennett Fletcher (NIDA) Drug Abuse Treatment Outcome Studies (Funded by NIDA)

Slide 2 of 20 Drug Abuse Treatment Outcome Studies Third National Evaluation of Treatment Effectiveness Over 60 Studies Published – Over 60 Studies Published – Psychology of Addictive Behaviors (Dec 97) Drug and Alcohol Dependence (Dec 99) Archives of General Psychiatry (June 99) Funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse Cities 96 Programs ~10,000 Patients All treatment types Follow-up: 1 & 5 Yrs

Slide 3 of 20 DATOS Research Centers  Treatment Selection, Access, and Utilization Robert Hubbard, Ph.D. NDRI, Inc. Raleigh, North Carolina  Addiction and Treatment Careers Douglas Anglin, Ph.D. University of California Los Angeles, California  Treatment Engagement and Retention Dwayne Simpson, Ph.D. Texas Christian University Fort Worth, Texas  Applications and Policy Development Bennett Fletcher, Ph.D. NIDA Rockville, Maryland

Slide 4 of 20 Reasons for Field-based Treatment Outcome Studies  Effectiveness in “real world settings”  Funding decisions by policy-makers  Public information & support  Test impact of clinical advancements  Changes occur over time in -- 3 Types or trends of patient drug use 3 Treatment services & resources

Slide 5 of 20 Changes in Drug Use Patterns alters Treatment Systems

Slide 6 of 20 CJ System Involvement and Referrals to Community Programs (DATOS) Craddock, Rounds-Bryant, Flynn, & Hubbard, 1997 (AJDAA)

Slide 7 of 20 DATOS: Overview of Sampling Plan  Longitudinal Data Collection 3Intakes ( ) 3During treatment (1-3 mos) 3Year 1 posttreatment 3Year 5 posttreatment  Sampled from 11 Cities across the U.S.  Includes 10,010 Admissions to 96 Programs 3N=2,774 from 21 Long-Term Residential (LTR) programs 3N=2,574 from 32 Outpatient Drug-Free (ODF) programs 3N=3,122 from 14 Short-Term Inpatient (STI) programs 3N=1,540 from 29 Outpatient Methadone Treatment (OMT) Portland San Jose Phoenix Houston NewOrleans New Orleans Miami Minneapolis Chicago Pittsburgh NewYork Newark Flynn, Craddock, Hubbard, Anderson, & Etheridge, 1997 (PAB)

Slide 8 of 20 Long-Term Residential (LTR)Treatment Changes from Before to After Treatment % of DATOS Sample (N=676) *p<.001 Hubbard, Craddock, Flynn, Anderson, & Etheridge, 1997 (PAB)

Slide 9 of 20 Outpatient Drug-Free (ODF) Treatment Changes from Before to After Treatment % of DATOS Sample (N=764) *p<.001 Hubbard, Craddock, Flynn, Anderson, & Etheridge, 1997 (PAB)

Slide 10 of 20 Short-Term Inpatient (STI) Treatment Changes from Before to After Treatment % of DATOS Sample (N=799) *p<.001 Hubbard, Craddock, Flynn, Anderson, & Etheridge, 1997 (PAB)

Slide 11 of 20 % of DATOS Sample (N=727) Outpatient Methadone Treatment (OMT) Changes from Before to After Treatment *p<.001 Hubbard, Craddock, Flynn, Anderson, & Etheridge, 1997 (PAB)

Slide 12 of 20 Drug Abuse Treatment Core Components and Comprehensive Services Medical Mental Health Vocational Educational Legal AIDS / HIV Risks Financial Housing & Transportation Child Care Family Continuing Care Case Management Urine Monitoring Self-Help (AA/NA) Pharmaco- therapy Group/Individual Counseling Abstinence Based Intake Assessment Treatment PlansCoreTreatment Etheridge, Hubbard, Anderson, Craddock, & Flynn, 1997 (PAB)

Slide 13 of 20 Changes in LTR Core Treatment: 1990s (DATOS ) vs. 1980s (TOPS) % of Long-Term Residential (LTR) Sample Hubbard, Craddock, Flynn, Anderson, & Etheridge, 1997 (PAB)

Slide 14 of 20 Changes in ODF Core Treatment: 1990s (DATOS ) vs. 1980s (TOPS) % of Outpatient Drug-Free (ODF) Sample Hubbard, Craddock, Flynn, Anderson, & Etheridge, 1997 (PAB)

Slide 15 of 20 Changes in OMT Core Treatment: 1990s (DATOS ) vs. 1980s (TOPS) % of Outpatient Methadone Treatment (OMT) Sample Hubbard, Craddock, Flynn, Anderson, & Etheridge, 1997 (PAB)

Slide 16 of 20 Changes in “Wrap-Around” Services: 1990s (DATOS ) vs. 1980s (TOPS) % of Sample Receiving 2 or More Services Etheridge, Craddock, Dunteman, & Hubbard, 1995 (J Sub Abuse)

Slide 17 of 20 Changes in LTR Comprehensive Services: 1990s (DATOS ) vs. 1980s (TOPS) % of Long-Term Residential (LTR) Sample Hubbard, Craddock, Flynn, Anderson, & Etheridge, 1997 (PAB)

Slide 18 of 20 Changes in ODF Comprehensive Services: 1990s (DATOS ) vs. 1980s (TOPS) % of Outpatient Drug-Free (ODF) Sample Hubbard, Craddock, Flynn, Anderson, & Etheridge, 1997 (PAB)

Slide 19 of 20 Changes in OMT Comprehensive Services: 1990s (DATOS ) vs. 1980s (TOPS) % of Outpatient Methadone Treatment (OMT) Sample Hubbard, Craddock, Flynn, Anderson, & Etheridge, 1997 (PAB)

Slide 20 of 20 Selected Studies 1-Year Outcomes Treatment Services & Process Cocaine Treatment Selected Web Posters Adolescent Studies Cost Benefits of MM Treatment Readiness for Treatment News and Features Home Page About DATOS Background Highlights Special Topics Publications Web Posters What’s New CONTENT Cocaine Treatment Outcome Study is Released (in June 1999 issue of Archives of General Psychiatry) Findings emphasize the need for "adequate treatment stays," especially when problem severity is moderate-to-high. At least 90 days in intensive residential (TC) programs was indicated for high-severity cases. More information is provided in a new section of Highlights page, "Outcomes for Treatment of Cocaine Dependence.” Latest DATOS studies have been published in Drug and Alcohol Dependence Treatment process (engagement and participation), retention, and outcomes are the focus of this series of studies, and our first cost-benefit analysis addresses cocaine treatment. The latest DATOS publications and "in press" are listed on the Publications page.

Slide 21 of 20 Slide Navigator 1. Overview of Treatment Outcome Studies from DATOS (title slide) Overview of Treatment Outcome Studies from DATOS (title slide) 2. DATOS: Drug Abuse Treatment Outcome Studies DATOS: Drug Abuse Treatment Outcome Studies 3. DATOS Research Centers DATOS Research Centers 4. Reasons for Field-based Treatment Outcome Studies Reasons for Field-based Treatment Outcome Studies 5. Changes in Drug Use Patterns alters Treatment Systems Changes in Drug Use Patterns alters Treatment Systems 6. CJ System Involvement and Referrals to Community Programs (DATOS) CJ System Involvement and Referrals to Community Programs (DATOS) 7. DATOS: Overview of Sampling Plan DATOS: Overview of Sampling Plan 8. Long-Term Residential (LTR) Treatment: Changes from Before to After Treatment Long-Term Residential (LTR) Treatment: Changes from Before to After Treatment 9. Outpatient Drug-Free (ODF) Treatment: Changes from Before to After Treatment Outpatient Drug-Free (ODF) Treatment: Changes from Before to After Treatment 10. Short-Term Inpatient (STI) Treatment: Changes from Before to After Treatment Short-Term Inpatient (STI) Treatment: Changes from Before to After Treatment 11. Outpatient Methadone Treatment (OMT): Changes from Before to After Treatment Outpatient Methadone Treatment (OMT): Changes from Before to After Treatment 12. Drug Abuse Treatment Core Components and Comprehensive Services Drug Abuse Treatment Core Components and Comprehensive Services 13. Changes in LTR Core Treatment: 1990s (DATOS) vs. 1980s (TOPS) Changes in LTR Core Treatment: 1990s (DATOS) vs. 1980s (TOPS) 14. Changes in ODF Core Treatment: 1990s (DATOS) vs. 1980s (TOPS) Changes in ODF Core Treatment: 1990s (DATOS) vs. 1980s (TOPS) 15. Changes in OMT Core Treatment: 1990s (DATOS) vs. 1980s (TOPS) Changes in OMT Core Treatment: 1990s (DATOS) vs. 1980s (TOPS) 16. Changes in “Wrap-Around” Services: 1990s (DATOS) vs. 1980s (TOPS) Changes in “Wrap-Around” Services: 1990s (DATOS) vs. 1980s (TOPS) 17. Changes in LTR Comprehensive Services: 1990s (DATOS) vs. 1980s (TOPS) Changes in LTR Comprehensive Services: 1990s (DATOS) vs. 1980s (TOPS) 18. Changes in ODF Comprehensive Services: 1990s (DATOS) vs. 1980s (TOPS) Changes in ODF Comprehensive Services: 1990s (DATOS) vs. 1980s (TOPS) 19. Changes in OMT Comprehensive Services : 1990s (DATOS) vs. 1980s (TOPS) Changes in OMT Comprehensive Services : 1990s (DATOS) vs. 1980s (TOPS) 20. Slide for DATOS Web site ( Slide for DATOS Web site (