Impact of psychosocial treatments on associated problems of cocaine-dependent patients. |
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Authors: | Crits-Christoph, Paul Siqueland, Lynne McCalmont, Elizabeth Weiss, Roger D. Gastfriend, David R. Frank, Arlene Moras, Karla Barber, Jacques P. Blaine, Jack Thase, Michael E. |
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Abstract: | A previous report from the National Institute on Drug Abuse Collaborative Cocaine Treatment Study (P. Crits-Christoph et al., 1999) found relatively superior cocaine and drug use outcomes for individual drug counseling plus group drug counseling compared with other treatments. Using data from that study, the authors examined the relative efficacy of 4 treatments for cocaine dependence on psychosocial and other addiction-associated problems. The 487 patients were randomly assigned to 6 months of treatment with cognitive therapy, supportive-expressive therapy, or individual drug counseling (each with additional group drug counseling), or to group drug counseling alone. Assessments were made at baseline and monthly for 6 months during the acute treatment phase, with follow-up visits at 9 and 12 months. No significant differences between treatments were found on measures of psychiatric symptoms, employment, medical, legal, familysocial, interpersonal, or alcohol use problems. The authors concluded that the superiority of individual drug counseling in modifying cocaine use does not extend broadly to other addiction-associated problems. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | cocaine dependence individual drug counseling group drug counseling psychosocial treatment |
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