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Acceptance of moderate drinking by alcohol treatment services in the United States.
59
Citations
13
References
1994
Year
Substance UseModerate DrinkingMental HealthUnited StatesAlcohol MisuseSubstance Use TreatmentAddiction MedicineAlcohol Treatment ServicesPublic HealthHealth Services ResearchHealth PolicyPsychiatryAddiction TreatmentOutcomes ResearchAlcohol AbuseAlcohol ControlAlcohol DependenceSubstance AbuseAddictionAddiction Health Service ResearchMedicine
This study was designed to survey the acceptance of moderate drinking as an outcome goal by alcohol treatment services in the United States. Of a sample of 330 randomly selected services, there were 312 potential respondents of whom 196 (63%) returned surveys that were usable. Three-quarters of respondents reported that nonabstinence was not an acceptable outcome goal for patients in their program; however, 17% of these respondents endorsed the statement that nonabstinence was acceptable for patients in other alcohol programs or for their own patients after discharge. Of the remaining one-quarter of respondents who found moderate drinking acceptable for their patients, 80% worked in outpatient programs and 70% reported moderate drinking as appropriate for only 1-25% of their clientele. Respondents endorsing moderate drinking rated the following factors as important when selecting outcome goals: severity of physiological dependence, drinking history, psychological dependence, previous treatment, criminal behavior and liver function test results.
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