GREEK REITOX FOCAL POINT 3-4 OCTOBER 2002 Lisbon.

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Presentation transcript:

GREEK REITOX FOCAL POINT 3-4 OCTOBER 2002 Lisbon

Pompidou Group Project: Development and Testing of Exit from Treatment Form – ETI* for Clients in Drug Abuse Treatment *TDF (Treatment Discharge Form)  ETI (Exit from Treatment Indicator)

Main objectives: 1 st phase:  To develop and test a standard form for collecting core data on clients at the exit from treatment (completed, premature discharge or drop out)  To register core information for follow- up  Test the feasibility of linking data at entry (TDI) with those at the exit (ETI) through anonymous identifiers

Main objectives: 2 nd phase:  To test the relevance of characteristics at entry to those at exit in order to identify variables that might have an impact on the mode of discharge and the situation of the client upon it  To test the feasibility of developing a Treatment Retention Registration System (TRRS)

PARTICIPANTS: 15 cities from 6 countries France (Brest, Metz, Marseille, Nice, Paris, St Etienne) Greece (Athens, Thessaloniki) Italy (Rome) Russia (Moscow, St Petersburg) Slovenia (Murska Sobota) UK (Salford, Manchester)

3 Questionnaires:  ETI Core Item List: information for the client  Treatment Unit’s/Programme’s Director: information for the programme  Key worker’s questionnaire: for evaluation of the ETI

 12 ITEMS:  City  Treatment unit name  Client identifier  Type of treatment unit (substitution – drug free, inpatient – outpatient)  Date of intake  Date of discharge/last contact with client  Type of contact with this unit (old – new client)  Type of admission (regular – priority list, judicial etc)  Special population subgroup (adolescent, probation, dual diagnosis)  Type of treatment the client followed (detoxification, substitution, drug-free, advice etc)  Mode of discharge (completed, drop out, discharge, referral, deceased, change of residence, imprisoned)  Situation of client upon discharge (drug use, physical – psychological health, judiciary, social relationships, employment, housing)

Programs participating: 2 substitution programs in Athens (outpatient) 1 drug – free program in Athens (outpatient) 1 drug – free program in Thessaloniki (inpatient) Forms collected: 81 Discharge Forms: 62 from substitution 19 from drug-free

Results  40,8% of data already exists (the highest among countries)  missing values per item varied from 1,2% to 9,8%  the highest: special population subgroup

Efficiency of identifiers (TDI – ETI):  74 out of 81 (91,4%) clients matched  mean time between intake and discharge: 13 months Type of contact:  71 (87,7%) new clients  6 (7,4%) old clients Type of admission:  68 (83,9%) regular waiting list  12 (14,8%) priority

Special population subgroup:  64 (79%) no special subgroup  8 (9,9%) dual diagnosis  1 (1,2%) probation or parole Type of treatment (more than one choice):  51 (63%) advice/counseling  39 (48,1%) maintenance  18 (22,2%) medicament free therapy  11 (13,5%) detoxification

Mode of discharge:  30 (37%) premature discharge  22 (27,2%) treatment completed  8 (9,9%) referral Drug situation upon discharge:  29 (35,8%) drug free  27 (33,3%) worsened  15 (18,5%) improved

Health situation:  34 (42%) improved  32 (39,5%) stable  13 (165) worsened Judiciary situation:  52 (64,2%) no judicial involvement  18 (22,2%) awaiting trial  6 (7,4%) missing

Psychological situation:  29 (35,8%) improved  28 (34,6%) stable  21 (25,9%) worsened Social relationships:  39 (48,1%) stable  26 (32,1%) improved  15 (18,5%) worsened

Employment situation:  39 (48,1%) unemployed  25 (30,9%) part time  14 (17,3%) full time Housing/living conditions:  49 (60,5%) with family/relatives  19 (23,5%) own apartment  5 (6,2%) sharing apartment

Results from 66 Evaluation Forms:  quick and very easy to complete  item 10 and 12 most difficult Further comments:  the client’s disposition to re-approach the Unit  the client’s marital status  add categories to special population subgroup

 have proved the feasibility of the instrument in out-patient and in-patient settings  offers the basis for follow-up after exit from treatment  comparable results for further comparisons, treatment quality evaluation and rehabilitation prognosis STRENGTHS  promotes thinking about the possible uses of treatment discharge data

LIMITS TO EVALUATING  short duration of the development phase of the instrument  the limited number of participating countries did not permit a broad enough range of opinion to be canvassed  the qualitative character of some items

FURTHER CONSIDERATIONS  incorporate feedback from the agents  great obstacles in evaluation of treatment: reconsideration or readjustment of targets

The End