Tripp Jessica C, Skidmore Jessica R, Cui Ruifeng, Tate Susan R
VA San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, California, USA ; The University of Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee, USA.
J Dual Diagn. 2013;9(3). doi: 10.1080/15504263.2013.806111.
There is a high rate of comorbidity among substance dependence, depression, and physical health problems. This study aimed to examine the impact of pre-treatment physical health stressors (acute and chronic conditions) on outcomes of treatment in a sample of veterans with dual disorders (depression and substance dependence) who were randomized to integrated cognitive behavioral therapy versus 12-Step interventions.
This study included 205 veterans (89.8% male, mean age = 49.5 years) enrolled in a clinical treatment outcomes trial. Chronic health problems (persistent, ongoing conditions lasting 2 weeks or more; e.g., arthritis, diabetes) and acute health events (occurring on a discrete date; e.g., injury, surgery, myocardial infarction) were coded dichotomously (presence versus absence) and evaluated separately. The impact of physical health stressors on abstinence (defined dichotomously), percentage of days abstinent, and depression symptoms were analyzed at the end of 12 and 24 weeks of treatment. Additionally, associations between intake motivation to change, health stressors, and substance use were examined.
Analyses revealed that participants who had experienced a pretreatment acute health event had higher rates of abstinence at 12-weeks, higher percentage of days abstinent at 24-weeks, and higher depression symptoms at intake. Participants with chronic health difficulties had more severe depression at intake and those participants with severe chronic difficulties had greater depression symptoms across all time points. Chronic health difficulties were related to the Taking Steps factor of motivation to change substance use, but acute health events were not related to motivation to change. Motivation to change was also not related to substance outcomes in our sample.
Physical health appears to have a complex relationship with co-occurring depression and substance dependence. Acute health problems predicted lower substance use, whereas chronic health problems were associated with higher depression levels. Explicitly addressing the connection between substance use and health events during treatment may improve addiction treatment outcomes. However, individuals with chronic health problems may benefit from extending treatment or adjunct strategies focused on addressing chronic health concerns. This is an analysis of data collected as part of a clinical trial registered at www.ClinicalTrials.gov as NCT00108407.
物质依赖、抑郁和身体健康问题之间的共病率很高。本研究旨在探讨治疗前身体健康应激源(急性和慢性疾病)对随机分配接受综合认知行为疗法与12步干预的双重障碍(抑郁和物质依赖)退伍军人样本治疗结果的影响。
本研究纳入了205名参加临床治疗结果试验的退伍军人(89.8%为男性,平均年龄 = 49.5岁)。慢性健康问题(持续2周或更长时间的持续性疾病,如关节炎、糖尿病)和急性健康事件(在特定日期发生,如受伤、手术、心肌梗死)进行二分编码(存在与否)并分别评估。在治疗12周和24周结束时分析身体健康应激源对戒酒(二分定义)、戒酒天数百分比和抑郁症状的影响。此外,还研究了改变动机、健康应激源和物质使用之间的关联。
分析显示,经历过治疗前急性健康事件的参与者在12周时戒酒率更高,在24周时戒酒天数百分比更高,且在入组时抑郁症状更严重。患有慢性健康问题的参与者在入组时抑郁更严重,而那些患有严重慢性疾病的参与者在所有时间点的抑郁症状都更严重。慢性健康问题与改变物质使用动机的“采取步骤”因素有关,但急性健康事件与改变动机无关。在我们的样本中,改变动机也与物质使用结果无关。
身体健康似乎与并发的抑郁和物质依赖存在复杂关系。急性健康问题预示着较低的物质使用,而慢性健康问题与较高的抑郁水平相关。在治疗期间明确解决物质使用与健康事件之间的联系可能会改善成瘾治疗结果。然而,患有慢性健康问题的个体可能会从延长治疗或专注于解决慢性健康问题的辅助策略中受益。这是对作为在www.ClinicalTrials.gov上注册为NCT00108407的临床试验一部分收集的数据的分析。