Gw. Joe et al., TREATMENT PROCESS AND RELAPSE TO OPIOID USE DURING METHADONE-MAINTENANCE, The American journal of drug and alcohol abuse, 20(2), 1994, pp. 173-197
A general framework for studying drug abuse treatment process factors
is presented, and components are then used to predict relapse to opioi
d use during treatment in methadone maintenance. Major domains of the
treatment process research framework include client variables at entry
, program characteristics, treatment events, and client outcomes. The
analyses rely on the use of proportional hazards models to identify si
gnificant outcome predictors in a sample of 590 methadone maintenance
clients from 21 clinics in the Research Triangle Institute/Treatment O
utcome Prospective Study (RTI/TOPS) data system who remained in treatm
ent at least 3 months. The analyses were performed on the total sample
and separately on clients from three groups of clinics classified on
the basis of the distribution of client relapse rates and tenure in tr
eatment. Relapse rates were related to dosage level, client monitoring
with urinalyses, and methadone take-home privileges in some clinics,
and hence, these time-varying treatment events were important factors
in treatment outcomes. Even at entry to treatment, some measures were
found to be related to how the client later performed during treatment
. Finally, it was also found that the particular area of professional
specialty of the staff making client diagnosis at intake and preparing
treatment plans was associated with client outcomes.