Brief Encounters Can Provide Motivation To Reduce or Stop Drug Abuse
New research supported by the National Institute
on Drug Abuse (NIDA), National Institutes of Health, shows that
meeting with an addiction peer counselor just once at the time
of a routine doctor visit with a followup booster phone call can
motivate abusers of cocaine and heroin to reduce their drug use.
The study, by husband and wife research team Dr. Judith Bernstein
and Dr. Edward Bernstein and their colleagues at Boston University
Schools of Medicine and Public Health, is published in the January
2005 issue of Drug and Alcohol Dependence.
"Brief interventions have proven effective in initiating positive
behavior changes in people who are dependent on alcohol," notes
NIDA Director Dr. Nora D. Volkow. "Preliminary assessments of this
process in drug abusers have been encouraging enough to investigate
it more thoroughly as a therapeutic tool to enhance treatment."
The motivational interview used in this study was designed to
establish rapport with the participant and covered such areas as
asking permission to discuss drugs, exploring the pros and cons
of drug use, eliciting the gap between real and desired quality
of life, and assessing readiness to change. This 20-minute intervention
also included development of an action plan.
The study was conducted among 1,175 men and women who had tested
positive for cocaine or heroin abuse. Participants were randomly
assigned to an intervention group or a control group. Intervention
consisted of a motivational interview with a substance abuse outreach
worker who also was a recovering addict, referrals to active drug
abuse treatment programs, a written list of treatment options,
and a followup telephone call 10 days later. Members of the control
group received only the written list.
Six months following enrollment, the researchers found that among
those who abused cocaine, 22.3 percent of the intervention group
were abstinent from the drug, compared with 16.9 percent of the
control group; among those who abused heroin, 40.2 percent of the
intervention group were abstinent from the drug, compared with
30.6 percent of the control group. As for people who used both
drugs, 17.4 percent of the intervention group were drug free, compared
with 12.8 percent of the control group.
"This study not only shows that this type of intervention provides
true benefits in reducing cocaine and heroin abuse, it also suggests
that peer interventionists can play an important role in busy clinical
environments," says Dr. Volkow.
Source: National Institute on Drug Abuse |