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No-Show for Treatment in Substance Abuse Patients with Comorbid Symptomatology: Validity Results from a Controlled Trial of the ASAM Patient Placement Criteria.

Authors :
Angarita GA
Reif S
Pirard S
Lee S
Sharon E
Gastfriend DR
Source :
Journal of addiction medicine [J Addict Med] 2007 Jun; Vol. 1 (2), pp. 79-87.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Purpose: : Mismatched placement, according to the American Society of Addiction Medicine's (ASAM) Patient Placement Criteria (PPC), promotes no-shows to treatment; however, little is known about the impact on patients with psychiatrically comorbid substance use disorder.<br />Methods: : In a multisite trial, public-sector treatment-seeking adults (N = 700), following a computer-assisted ASAM PPC-1 structured interview, were blindly scored and randomly assigned to Level-of-Care (LOC)-II (intensive outpatient) or LOC-III (residential) settings. Patients scored as needing LOC-II but assigned to LOC-III were, by definition, "overmatched."<br />Results: : Among 143 overmatched patients, no-shows were significantly higher in comorbids versus noncomorbids (54% versus 28%; P < 0.01). Among overmatched comorbids, patients who no-showed compared with patients who showed were more likely to be females (70.4% versus 34.8%; P < 0.05), to have anxiety (63% versus 17.4%; P < 0.01), or have supportive family/social environments (81.5% versus 34.8%; P < 0.01).<br />Conclusions: : The data support the validity of the PPC for matching comorbid patients. Mismatching increases no-show rates in general with undermatching, but it does so in particular with overmatching in patients with comorbid psychiatric symptomatology. Comorbidity interacts with gender, overmatched status, presence of anxiety, and supportive environment as predictors of treatment no-shows (odds ratios = 2.69, P < 0.05; 3.27, P < 0.05; 5.32, P < 0.001; and 3.12, P < 0.05, respectively).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1932-0620
Volume :
1
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of addiction medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
21768939
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/ADM.0b013e3180634c1d