Johnston DC, Mathews WD, Maus A, Gustafson DH. Using Smartphones to Improve Treatment Retention Among Impoverished Substance-Using Appalachian Women: A Naturalistic Study.
SUBSTANCE ABUSE-RESEARCH AND TREATMENT 2019;
13:1178221819861377. [PMID:
31312084 PMCID:
PMC6614935 DOI:
10.1177/1178221819861377]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 12] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 05/31/2019] [Accepted: 06/13/2019] [Indexed: 11/24/2022]
Abstract
Objectives:
Longer retention in treatment is associated with positive outcomes. For
women, who suffer worse drug-related problems than men, social technologies,
which are more readily adopted by women, may offer promise. This
naturalistic study examined whether a smartphone-based relapse-prevention
system, A-CHESS (Addiction-Comprehensive Health Enhancement Support System),
could improve retention for women with substance use disorders in an
impoverished rural setting.
Methods:
A total of 98 women, age 18 to 40, in southeastern Kentucky and mandated to
treatment, received A-CHESS with intensive outpatient treatment for
6 months. For comparison, data were obtained for a similar but
non-equivalent group of 100 same-age women also mandated to treatment in the
same clinics during the period. Electronic medical record data on
length-of-stay and treatment service use for both groups were analyzed, with
A-CHESS use data, to determine whether those using A-CHESS showed better
retention than those without.
Results:
Women with A-CHESS averaged 780 service units compared with 343 for the
comparison group. For those with discharge dates prior to the study’s end,
A-CHESS patients stayed in treatment a mean of 410 vs 262 days for the
comparison group.
Conclusions:
Given associations between retention and positive outcomes, mobile health
technology such as A-CHESS may help improve outcomes among women, especially
in settings where access to in-person services is difficult. The findings,
based on a non-equivalent comparison, suggest the need for further
exploration with rigorous experimental designs to determine whether and to
what degree access to a smartphone with A-CHESS may extend and support
recovery for women.
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