Gender Differences in Seven-Year Alcohol and Drug Treatment Outcomes among Older Adults
Authors:
Derek D. Satre ab;
Frederic C. Blow c;
Felicia W. Chi b;
Constance Weisner ab
| Affiliations: | a Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, California |
| b Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern California Region, Oakland, California | |
| c Serious Mental Illness Treatment Research and Evaluation Center, Ann Arbor VA Healthcare System and Department of Psychiatry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan |
DOI:
10.1080/10550490701375673
Publication Frequency:
6 issues per year
Subject:
Addiction & Treatment;
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Abstract
This study examined participants at seven-year follow-up to assess long-term outcomes of older women (n = 25) and men (n = 59) ages 55 and over in an outpatient addiction program. It measured demographic characteristics, alcohol and drug use, psychiatric symptoms, Addiction Severity Index, treatment length, and outcomes. At seven years, 76.0% of women reported abstinence in the prior 30 days versus 54.2% of men, p = .05. Logistic regression analysis found that longer treatment stay predicted abstinence. Findings indicate that older women have better long-term addiction outcome than older men, but treatment length is more significant than gender in predicting outcome.(Am J Addict 2007;16-221)
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