The relationship between self-reported substance use and psychiatric symptoms in low-threshold methadone maintenance treatment clients

Heather G. Fulton, Sean P. Barrett, Cindy MacIsaac, Sherry H. Stewart

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

10 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Background: Ongoing psychiatric symptoms and substance use are common difficulties experienced by clients enrolled in methadone maintenance treatment (MMT). However, little research to date has evaluated if specific types of current substance use are related to specific types of current psychiatric symptoms. The present study investigated these relationships with a sample of clients enrolled in a low-threshold MMT program (i.e., clients are not expelled if they continue to use substances). Some clients enrolled in low-threshold programs may never achieve complete abstinence from all substances. Thus, understanding the possibly perpetuating relationships between concurrent substance use and psychiatric symptoms is important. Understanding such relationships may aid in developing possible target areas of treatment to reduce substance use and/or related harms in this population.Methods: Seventy-seven individuals were interviewed regarding methadone usage and current and past substance use. Current psychiatric symptoms were assessed using a modified version of the Psychiatric Diagnostic Screening Questionnaire (PDSQ). Relationships between types of substances used in the past 30 days and the types and number of psychiatric symptoms experienced in the same timeframe were examined.Results: The majority of participants (87.0%) reported using alcohol, illicit substances, non-prescribed prescription opioids, or non-prescribed benzodiazepines in the past 30 days and 77.9% of participants reported currently experiencing psychiatric symptoms at levels that would likely warrant diagnosis. Current non-prescribed benzodiazepine use was a predictor for increased severity (i.e., symptom count) of almost all anxiety and mood disorders assessed. Conversely, number and presence of generalized anxiety symptoms and presence of social phobia symptoms predicted current non-prescribed benzodiazepine and alcohol use, respectively.Conclusions: Individuals enrolled in the present low-threshold MMT program experience a wide variety of psychiatric symptoms and continue to use a variety of substances, including opioids. There was a particularly consistent pattern of associations between non-prescribed benzodiazepine use and a variety of psychiatric symptoms (particularly anxiety) suggesting that addressing concurrent illicit benzodiazepine use and anxiety symptoms in MMT clients warrants further clinical attention and research.

Idioma originalEnglish
Número de artículo18
PublicaciónHarm Reduction Journal
Volumen8
DOI
EstadoPublished - abr. 9 2011

Nota bibliográfica

Funding Information:
The authors would like to acknowledge those who assisted with the present study: Jessica Meisner, Cathy Hilchey, Haley Gray, Desiree MacDonald, Sergiu Mocanu, Lindsay Peters, Lyndsay Bozec, and Direction 180 staff and clientele. The authors would also like to thank the funders of this study and the authors’ work: a Canadian Institutes of Health Research grant to SPB & SHS, a Canadian Institutes of Health Research Doctoral Research Award and research stipend to HGF, a Killam Doctoral Scholarship to HGF, and a Killam Research Professorship to SHS.

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Medicine (miscellaneous)
  • Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
  • Psychiatry and Mental health

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