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National Institute on Drug Abuse -  NIDA NOTES
Treatment Research
Volume 12, Number 5
September/October 1997

DATOS Documents Dramatic Decline In Drug Abuse Treatment Services


Drug Abuse Treatment Outcome Study (DATOS) researchers report a widening gap over the last decade between patients' needs for support services that go beyond basic treatment techniques such as drug abuse counseling and the availability of those services. Such support services address medical, psychological, family, legal, vocational, and financial problems with which many drug abusers need help to stay in treatment, reduce substance abuse, and improve other areas of social functioning.

The investigators compared the type and number of both core drug abuse treatment services and support services with those that had been delivered a little over a decade before with the Treatment Outcome Prospective Study (TOPS). "What we found was alarming. In every problem area studied, the type and number of support services had decreased from TOPS to DATOS, while the need for those services had increased," says Dr. Bennett Fletcher, chief of NIDA's Services Research Branch.

Dr. Rose Etheridge and her colleagues at the National Development and Research Institutes in Raleigh, North Carolina found that more than half of DATOS patients in all four types of treatment-outpatient methadone, long-term residential, outpatient drug-free, and short-term inpatient - did not report receiving many services that they said they needed.

Patients in Treatment Who Needed But Did Not Receive Support Services: TOPS vs. DATOS

Graph

* Short-term inpatient programs were not studied under TOPS.

Patients in the drug abuse treatment programs studied in DATOS reported unmet needs for additional support services much more often than did patients surveyed in TOPS, the earlier study, which covered treatment admissions from 1979 to 1981.


Some 65.3 percent of DATOS patients in outpatient methadone programs reported that they did not receive any support services during the critical first three months of treatment compared to 49.5 percent in TOPS. In outpatient drug-free programs, 60.2 percent of DATOS patients said that they did not receive such services compared to 18.2 percent of TOPS patients.

Few gender differences were found in patient reports of services received and unmet service needs after three months in treatment. Only small gender differences were found in unmet needs in DATOS compared to TOPS.

Source

Etheridge, R.M.; Craddock, S.G.; Dunteman, G.H.; and Hubbard, R.L. Treatment services in two national studies of community-based drug abuse treatment programs. Journal of Substance Abuse 7:9-26, 1995.

NIDA NOTES - September/October 1997

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