Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, volume 88, issue 12, pages 1119-1132
Patterns of transitions between relapse to and remission from heavy drinking over the first year after outpatient alcohol treatment and their relation to long-term outcomes.
Stephen A. Maisto
1
,
Kevin A. Hallgren
2
,
Corey R. Roos
3
,
Julia E. Swan
4
,
Katie Edwards
4
4
Department of Psychology, University of New Mexico,
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Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2020-12-28
scimago Q1
SJR: 2.386
CiteScore: 9.0
Impact factor: 4.5
ISSN: 0022006X, 19392117
Clinical Psychology
Psychiatry and Mental health
Abstract
Objectives Studying clinical course after alcohol use disorder (AUD) treatment is central to understanding longer-term recovery. This study's two main objectives were to (a) replicate a recent study that identified heterogeneity in patterns of remission from/relapse to heavy drinking during the first year after outpatient treatment in an independent data set and (b) extend these recent findings by testing associations between patterns of remission/relapse and long-term alcohol-related and functioning outcomes. Method Latent profile analyses were conducted using data from Project MATCH (N = 952; M age = 38.9; 72.3% female) and COMBINE (N = 1,383; M age = 44.4; 69.1% male). Transitions between heavy and nonheavy drinking within consecutive 2-week periods over a 1-year posttreatment period were characterized for each participant. From this, latent profiles were identified based on participants' initial 2-week heavy drinking status, the number of observed transitions between 2-week periods of relapse and and the average duration of observed remission/relapse episodes. Results In both MATCH and COMBINE, we identified six profiles: (a) continuous remission, 25.3% of COMBINE sample/25.3% of MATCH sample; (b) transition to remission, 19.6%/9.6%; (c) few long transitions, 15.9%/33.7%; (d) short transitions, 13.2%/13.6%; (e) transition to relapse, 7.2%/7.1%; and (f) continuous relapse, 18.8%/10.5%. Profiles 1 and 2 had the best long-term outcomes, Profiles 5 and 6 had the worst, and Profiles 3 and 4 fell between these groups. Conclusions That many individuals can remit from heavy drinking following one or more relapses to heavy drinking may be of direct interest to individuals in recovery from AUD. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
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