Decomposing the relationships between pretreatment social network characteristics and alcohol treatment outcome

TitleDecomposing the relationships between pretreatment social network characteristics and alcohol treatment outcome
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2002
AuthorsZywiak, WIH, Longabaugh, R, Wirtz, PW
JournalJournal of Studies on Alcohol
Volume63
Pagination114-121
PublisherAlcohol Research Documentation
Place PublishedUS
Publication Languageeng
ISBN Number0096-882X
KeywordsAlcohol Rehabilitation, alcohol treatment outcome, Client Treatment Matching, network support for drinking, pretreatment social network characteristics, Project MATCH, Social Influences, Social Support, Treatment Outcomes
Abstract

In Project MATCH, a summary measure of network support for drinking identified matching and prognostic effects. The goals of the present analyses were (1) to determine which of the 11 component indexes are most predictive of treatment outcome regardless of treatment type and (2) to determine which of the indexes are most influential in the already demonstrated network support by treatment interaction effect. This is a secondary data analysis of the outpatient arm of Project MATCH (N=952; mean age 39 yrs), focusing primarily on the Important People and Activities instrument administered pretreatment. Patients with larger daily networks and patients with more abstainers/recovering alcoholics in their networks had a better prognosis. Patients with a higher network drinking frequency did better in Twelve Step Facilitation than in Motivational Enhancement Therapy. Three of the 11 indexes can be used to replicate the prognostic and matching effects found for an overall index of network support. These may be measured by a short form of the Important People and Activities instrument. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)

URLhttp://libproxy.unm.edu/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=psyh&AN=2002-13004-014&login.asp&site=ehost-live&scope=sitezywiak@pire.org
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