A review of research-supported group treatments for drug use disorders

被引:0
作者
Gabriela López
Lindsay M. Orchowski
Madhavi K. Reddy
Jessica Nargiso
Jennifer E. Johnson
机构
[1] Brown University,Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies
[2] Alpert Medical School of Brown University,Massachusetts General Hospital
[3] Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior,Division of Public Health
[4] Walter Reed Army Institute of Research,undefined
[5] Harvard Medical School,undefined
[6] Michigan State University,undefined
来源
Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy | / 16卷
关键词
Treatment; Substance use disorders; Group; Group therapy; Review;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This paper reviews methodologically rigorous studies examining group treatments for interview-diagnosed drug use disorders. A total of 50 studies reporting on the efficacy of group drug use disorder treatments for adults met inclusion criteria. Studies examining group treatment for cocaine, methamphetamine, marijuana, opioid, mixed substance, and substance use disorder with co-occurring psychiatric conditions are discussed. The current review showed that cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) group therapy and contingency management (CM) groups appear to be more effective at reducing cocaine use than treatment as usual (TAU) groups. CM also appeared to be effective at reducing methamphetamine use relative to standard group treatment. Relapse prevention support groups, motivational interviewing, and social support groups were all effective at reducing marijuana use relative to a delayed treatment control. Group therapy or group CBT plus pharmacotherapy are more effective at decreasing opioid use than pharmacotherapy alone. An HIV harm reduction program has also been shown to be effective for reducing illicit opioid use. Effective treatments for mixed substance use disorder include group CBT, CM, and women’s recovery group. Behavioral skills group, group behavioral therapy plus CM, Seeking Safety, Dialectical behavior therapy groups, and CM were more effective at decreasing substance use and psychiatric symptoms relative to TAU, but group psychoeducation and group CBT were not. Given how often group formats are utilized to treat drug use disorders, the present review underscores the need to understand the extent to which evidence-based group therapies for drug use disorders are applied in treatment settings.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 427 条
  • [1] Grant BF(2016)Epidemiology of DSM-5 drug use disorder: results from the National Epidemiologic Survey on alcohol and related conditions-III JAMA Psychiatry 73 39-47
  • [2] Saha TD(2013)Defining substance use disorders: do we really need more than heavy use? Alcohol Alcohol 48 633-640
  • [3] Ruan WJ(2011)Societal costs of prescription opioid abuse, dependence, and misuse in the United States Pain Med 12 657-667
  • [4] Goldstein RB(2016)The economic burden of prescription opioid overdose, abuse, and dependence in the United States, 2013 Med Care 54 901-906
  • [5] Chou SP(2017)Costs and outcomes of mental health and substance use disorders in the US JAMA 318 415-279
  • [6] Jung J(2016)Why young people's substance use matters for global health Lancet Psychiatry 3 265-16
  • [7] Rehm J(2008)Medical consequences of drug abuse and co-occurring infections: research at the National Institute on Drug Abuse Subst Abus 29 5-542
  • [8] Marmet S(2004)Injection drug use and crack cocaine smoking: independent and dual risk behaviors for HIV infection Ann Epidemiol 14 535-106
  • [9] Anderson P(1998)Current Management of Infectious Complications in the injecting drug user J Subst Abus Treat 15 95-72
  • [10] Gual A(1996)Evidence based medicine: what it is and what it isn't BMJ. 312 71-285