Does assertive community treatment increase medication adherence for people with co-occurring psychotic and substance use disorders?

Categoría Estudio primario
RevistaJournal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association
Año 2011
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OBJECTIVE:

This study analyzed data from a randomized trial to examine the impact on medication adherence of integrated treatment delivered via assertive community treatment (ACT) versus standard clinical case management (SCCM).

METHOD:

Data from the original study included 198 study participants with co-occurring psychotic and substance use disorders who were randomly assigned to receive integrated treatment via ACT or SCCM and were followed for 3 years. We applied mixed-effects logistic regression to estimate group (ACT vs. SCCM) by time effects on a self-report measure of medication adherence. Adherence was dichotomized as 20% or more missed medication days ("poor adherence") versus less than 20% missed medication days ("adequate adherence").

RESULTS:

Participants who were assigned to ACT reported significant improvement in medication adherence compared with those assigned to SCCM.

CONCLUSIONS:

Integrated treatment delivered via ACT may benefit persons with co-occurring psychotic and substance use disorders who are poorly adherent to medications. © The Author(s) 2011.
Epistemonikos ID: dab5c344c1b88737bcc69b42677e3d06e6a49b24
First added on: Nov 19, 2013