Change in psychosocial factors connected to coping after inpatient treatment for substance use disorder: a systematic review

Abstract Background Among the adult population worldwide, about 0.5% has illicit drug use disorder (DUD) and about 5% has alcohol use disorder (AUD). Dependency on alcohol, medication or illicit drugs are recognised as risk factors for disabling disease and early death. Treatment for substance use d...

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Main Authors: Dagny Adriaenssen Johannessen, Trond Nordfjærn, Amy Østertun Geirdal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-05-01
Series:Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13011-019-0210-9
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spelling doaj-3bc3700020ec43639325e9ce3a27ee372020-11-25T03:02:46ZengBMCSubstance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy1747-597X2019-05-0114111510.1186/s13011-019-0210-9Change in psychosocial factors connected to coping after inpatient treatment for substance use disorder: a systematic reviewDagny Adriaenssen Johannessen0Trond Nordfjærn1Amy Østertun Geirdal2Blue Cross EastDepartment of Psychology, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Social Work, Child Welfare and Social Policy, OsloMet – Oslo Metropolitan UniversityAbstract Background Among the adult population worldwide, about 0.5% has illicit drug use disorder (DUD) and about 5% has alcohol use disorder (AUD). Dependency on alcohol, medication or illicit drugs are recognised as risk factors for disabling disease and early death. Treatment for substance use disorders (SUD) is important in promoting persistent abstinence and may be perceived as a valuable public health measure. The current systematic review aims at exploring how psychosocial factors connected to recovery capital and coping behaviour, change after inpatient SUD treatment. Methods A systematic search was conducted in Campbell Collaboration Library, Cochrane Library, EMBASE, Epistemonikos, Medline, PsychINFO, Social Sciences Citation Index and SocINDEX. Cohort studies on psychosocial outcomes for adults who had attended to inpatient SUD treatment that exceeds 3 months, were included. The outcome of interest was change in psychosocial factors. The search results were identified as include, exclude or unclear by one author and then screened by the second author with a specific focus on studies recognised as unclear. Diverging evaluations of eligibility among the unclear studies were resolved by discussion. In case of disagreement, the third author decided the eligibility of the studies in question. Results Findings imply an overall progress in mental health, and a potential improvement in employment status and perceived social support after inpatient SUD treatment. Additionally, findings indicate a decrease in substance use from admission to follow-up after discharge from inpatient SUD treatment. These findings are consistent with earlier research on important factors in recovering from SUD. Findings on change in self-efficacy, housing, education and Quality of Life (QoL) however, were scantly researched and were expected to be more prominent outcomes of interest among the included studies. Conclusion Due to the substantial resources used to provide SUD treatment, knowledge about recovery capital, like psychosocial factors that facilitate coping behaviour and reintegration to society, should be standardised and used by SUD treatment providers. Trial Registration PROSPERO registration ID: CRD42018087408http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13011-019-0210-9Substance-related disordersResidential treatmentTreatment outcomeFollow-up studySocial adjustmentRecovery capital
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dagny Adriaenssen Johannessen
Trond Nordfjærn
Amy Østertun Geirdal
spellingShingle Dagny Adriaenssen Johannessen
Trond Nordfjærn
Amy Østertun Geirdal
Change in psychosocial factors connected to coping after inpatient treatment for substance use disorder: a systematic review
Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy
Substance-related disorders
Residential treatment
Treatment outcome
Follow-up study
Social adjustment
Recovery capital
author_facet Dagny Adriaenssen Johannessen
Trond Nordfjærn
Amy Østertun Geirdal
author_sort Dagny Adriaenssen Johannessen
title Change in psychosocial factors connected to coping after inpatient treatment for substance use disorder: a systematic review
title_short Change in psychosocial factors connected to coping after inpatient treatment for substance use disorder: a systematic review
title_full Change in psychosocial factors connected to coping after inpatient treatment for substance use disorder: a systematic review
title_fullStr Change in psychosocial factors connected to coping after inpatient treatment for substance use disorder: a systematic review
title_full_unstemmed Change in psychosocial factors connected to coping after inpatient treatment for substance use disorder: a systematic review
title_sort change in psychosocial factors connected to coping after inpatient treatment for substance use disorder: a systematic review
publisher BMC
series Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy
issn 1747-597X
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Abstract Background Among the adult population worldwide, about 0.5% has illicit drug use disorder (DUD) and about 5% has alcohol use disorder (AUD). Dependency on alcohol, medication or illicit drugs are recognised as risk factors for disabling disease and early death. Treatment for substance use disorders (SUD) is important in promoting persistent abstinence and may be perceived as a valuable public health measure. The current systematic review aims at exploring how psychosocial factors connected to recovery capital and coping behaviour, change after inpatient SUD treatment. Methods A systematic search was conducted in Campbell Collaboration Library, Cochrane Library, EMBASE, Epistemonikos, Medline, PsychINFO, Social Sciences Citation Index and SocINDEX. Cohort studies on psychosocial outcomes for adults who had attended to inpatient SUD treatment that exceeds 3 months, were included. The outcome of interest was change in psychosocial factors. The search results were identified as include, exclude or unclear by one author and then screened by the second author with a specific focus on studies recognised as unclear. Diverging evaluations of eligibility among the unclear studies were resolved by discussion. In case of disagreement, the third author decided the eligibility of the studies in question. Results Findings imply an overall progress in mental health, and a potential improvement in employment status and perceived social support after inpatient SUD treatment. Additionally, findings indicate a decrease in substance use from admission to follow-up after discharge from inpatient SUD treatment. These findings are consistent with earlier research on important factors in recovering from SUD. Findings on change in self-efficacy, housing, education and Quality of Life (QoL) however, were scantly researched and were expected to be more prominent outcomes of interest among the included studies. Conclusion Due to the substantial resources used to provide SUD treatment, knowledge about recovery capital, like psychosocial factors that facilitate coping behaviour and reintegration to society, should be standardised and used by SUD treatment providers. Trial Registration PROSPERO registration ID: CRD42018087408
topic Substance-related disorders
Residential treatment
Treatment outcome
Follow-up study
Social adjustment
Recovery capital
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13011-019-0210-9
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