An Outpatient Treatment Research Center is proposed that will specialize in the evaluation of outpatient services, including methadone maintenance and drug free modalities. The focus will be on secondary analysis of intake during treatment, and post-treatment follow-up records obtained as part of the DATOS family of studies. It will serve as one of two DATOS Field Research Centers responsible for conducting independent (but coordinated) studies that will address modality-specific issues (i.e., separately for outpatient and residential treatment settings) and achieve broad conceptual integration and application of findings. A DATOS Coordinating Center will continue followup data collection and related assessment studies as well as conduct cost-benefit evaluations with inputs from the Field Research Centers. This organizational plan will take advantage of special strengths of various research teams and ensure that together they conduct complementary, non-duplicative studies. Experience from previous large-scale and multisite treatment evaluations will guide the work conceptually, especially treatment process and outcome research based on the Drug Abuse Treatment for AIDS-Risk Reduction project (DATAR), a NIDA-funded treatment research demonstration grant for enhancing community- based outpatient programs. The analytical framework developed and implemented as part of DATAR studies on outpatient methadone treatment will be applied and elaborated with special attention devoted to the DATOS-Adult files. The incremental research plan to be applied across the 5-year project will focus on four sequential dimensions of outcome criteria: early treatment dropouts (<90 days), during-treatment performance, year 1 followup outcomes, and year 3 followup outcomes. During-treatment criteria will emphasize program engagement and compliance indicators, while followup criteria will emphasize drug use, HIV/AIDS risks, criminality, employment, and psychosocial adjustment measures. Major domains of predictor variables will include sociodemographics, drug use history, psychosocial background (psychopathology, cognitive deficits, work and social skills), treatment motivation (treatment history, readiness, legal pressures), support systems (family and friends), therapeutic engagement (length of stay, session attendance, indications of rapport between client and counselor), and program environment (staff structure, policies, procedures). General elements of this evaluation framework will apply to all DATOS-family databases. The major objectives include: (1) the description of treatment process and outcomes from typical programs, (2) identification of client, program, and service delivery factors related to treatment engagement and outcomes, and (3) development of statistical models that help clarify interrelationships among predictor and outcome measures. The results will lead to treatment improvement strategies for policy development.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Research Project--Cooperative Agreements (U01)
Project #
1U01DA010374-01
Application #
2123815
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (SRCD (25))
Project Start
1995-09-30
Project End
2000-08-31
Budget Start
1995-09-30
Budget End
1996-08-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
1995
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Texas Christian University
Department
Type
Organized Research Units
DUNS #
043807882
City
Fort Worth
State
TX
Country
United States
Zip Code
76129
Simpson, D Dwayne; Joe, George W; Dansereau, Donald F et al. (2011) Addiction treatment outcomes, process and change: Texas Institute of Behavioral Research at Texas Christian University. Addiction 106:1733-40
Agosti, Vito; Levin, Frances R (2006) One-year follow-up study of suicide attempters treated for drug dependence. Am J Addict 15:293-6
Rao, Sandhya R; Broome, Kirk M; Simpson, D Dwayne (2004) Depression and hostility as predictors of long-term outcomes among opiate users. Addiction 99:579-89
Flynn, Patrick M; Joe, George W; Broome, Kirk M et al. (2003) Looking back on cocaine dependence: reasons for recovery. Am J Addict 12:398-411
Flynn, Patrick M; Joe, George W; Broome, Kirk M et al. (2003) Recovery from opioid addiction in DATOS. J Subst Abuse Treat 25:177-86
Broome, Kirk M; Simpson, D Dwayne; Joe, George W (2002) The role of social support following short-term inpatient treatment. Am J Addict 11:57-65
Simpson, D Dwayne; Joe, George W; Broome, Kirk M (2002) A national 5-year follow-up of treatment outcomes for cocaine dependence. Arch Gen Psychiatry 59:538-44
Melnick, G; De Leon, G; Hiller, M L et al. (2000) Therapeutic communities: diversity in treatment elements. Subst Use Misuse 35:1819-47
Joe, G W; Simpson, D D; Broome, K M (1999) Retention and patient engagement models for different treatment modalities in DATOS. Drug Alcohol Depend 57:113-25
Broome, K M; Joe, G W; Simpson, D D (1999) HIV risk reduction in outpatient drug abuse treatment: individual and geographic differences. AIDS Educ Prev 11:293-306

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