Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, 195 Farmington Avenue, Farmington, CT 06032, United States.
Departmentof Psychiatry, University of Rochester Medical Center, 300 Crittenden Boulevard, Rochester, NY 14642, United States.
Alcohol Alcohol. 2024 May 14;59(4). doi: 10.1093/alcalc/agae037.
Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is among the most prevalent substance use disorders in the USA. Despite availability of effective interventions, treatment initiation and engagement remain low. Existing interventions target motivation and practical barriers to accessing treatment among individuals established within treatment systems. In contrast, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Treatment-Seeking (CBT-TS) aims to elicit and modify treatment-seeking beliefs to increase treatment-seeking behaviors among treatment-naïve samples. We aim to understand which beliefs were endorsed by those who did/did not initiate treatment, including changes in number of drinking days.
We examined treatment seeking beliefs elicited during CBT-TS among community-based adults with moderate-severe AUD with no treatment history. In this study, we discuss which beliefs were modifiable (i.e. those discussed during the intervention among individuals who subsequently attended treatment and may be associated with treatment-seeking behaviors).
Of the 194 participants who received the intervention, 16 categories of beliefs were endorsed. Of the 38 participants (19.6%) who attended treatment, the most frequently endorsed belief was 'Not wanting specific types of substance use treatment or supports' (50%), a belief that may inhibit treatment seeking. The idea 'Treatment is positive' (47%) was also frequently cited, a belief that may facilitate treatment seeking.
This study describes the beliefs that were more frequently endorsed among adults with moderate-severe, but untreated AUD who reported attending treatment following CBT-TS. Findings point to the potential of discussing and modifying treatment-seeking beliefs among treatment-naïve adults with severe AUD to increase treatment-seeking behaviors.
在美国,酒精使用障碍(AUD)是最常见的物质使用障碍之一。尽管有有效的干预措施,但治疗的开始和参与仍然很低。现有的干预措施针对的是已经在治疗系统内的个人的动机和获得治疗的实际障碍。相比之下,针对寻求治疗的认知行为疗法(CBT-TS)旨在引出和改变寻求治疗的信念,以增加治疗-naive 样本的治疗寻求行为。我们旨在了解哪些信念是那些开始/未开始治疗的人所认可的,包括饮酒天数的变化。
我们研究了在没有治疗史的中重度 AUD 的社区成年人中进行的 CBT-TS 中引出的治疗寻求信念。在这项研究中,我们讨论了哪些信念是可改变的(即在干预期间讨论过的信念,可能与治疗寻求行为有关)。
在接受干预的 194 名参与者中,有 16 种信念被认可。在 38 名(19.6%)参加治疗的参与者中,最常被认可的信念是“不希望接受特定类型的物质使用治疗或支持”(50%),这一信念可能会抑制治疗寻求。“治疗是积极的”(47%)的想法也经常被引用,这一信念可能促进治疗寻求。
本研究描述了在接受 CBT-TS 后报告接受治疗的中重度但未经治疗的 AUD 成年人中更频繁认可的信念。研究结果表明,在未经治疗的严重 AUD 成年人中讨论和改变治疗寻求信念可能会增加治疗寻求行为。