Project Details
Description
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant):
This health services application is a field replication and extension of our
prior work evaluating treatment settings for alcoholics. Our prior research,
conducted in a clinical research environment, found that individuals with a
more severe problem benefited more from inpatient than outpatient treatment.
For all clients, in patient treatment, relative to outpatient, resulted in
fewer combined days of residential treatment or incarceration throughout the
18 month follow-up. These findings are important since inpatient care is
becoming increasingly scarce due to the perception that less expensive
outpatient treatment is equally effective for all individuals. Moreover, in
the absence of empirically-derived placement criteria, level of care
determinations often appear circular and inefficient (i.e., to enter inpatient
treatment one has to fail outpatient first). Our findings suggest that more
efficient level of care determinations may be possible. To address these
issues further, we propose to test our earlier findings in a community field
setting by prospectively matching and mismatching clients based on alcohol
involvement level and/or level of cognitive functioning to either inpatient or
outpatient care. Clients presenting for treatment at the Downtown Clinic of
the Erie County Medical Center (ECMC), Buffalo, NY will be assigned to
inpatient need group (based on alcohol involvement and cognitive functioning
levels) and, within each group, randomly assigned to either (a) 21 days of
inpatient care at ECMC plus six months of continuing outpatient care.
Treatment will be the standard treatment received by clients in the respective
programs. All clients will be followed over 18 months following admission (12
months post-continuing outpatient care) and evaluated with respect to the
primary outcome measures of voluntary abstinent days and days of involuntary
abstinence (i.e., incarceration, residential treatment, etc.). Building on
our prior work, the proposal aims to contribute to a small but important body
of knowledge on efficient and effective client placement criteria.
| Status | Finished |
|---|---|
| Effective start/end date | 08/1/02 → 07/31/08 |
Funding
- National Institute for Alcohol Abuse & Alcoholism: $2,358,986.00
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