Individualized assessment and treatment program for alcohol dependence: results of an initial study to train coping skills

Authors: Litt, Mark D.; Kadden, Ronald M.1; Kabela-Cormier, Elise1

Source: Addiction, Volume 104, Number 11, November 2009 , pp. 1837-1838(2)

Publisher: Blackwell Publishing

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Abstract:

Aims 

Cognitive-behavioral treatments (CBT) are among the most popular interventions offered for alcohol and other substance use disorders, but it is not clear how they achieve their effects. CBT is purported to exert its beneficial effects by altering coping skills, but data supporting coping changes as the mechanism of action are mixed. The purpose of this pilot study was to test a treatment in which coping skills were trained in a highly individualized way, allowing us to determine if such training would result in an effective treatment. Design 

Participants were assigned randomly to a comprehensive packaged CBT program (PCBT), or to an individualized assessment and treatment program (IATP). The IATP program employed experience sampling via cellphone to assess coping skills prior to treatment, and provided therapists with a detailed understanding of patients' coping strengths and deficits. Setting 

Out-patient treatment. Participants 

A total of 110 alcohol-dependent men and women. Measurements 

Participants in both conditions completed experience sampling of situations, drinking and coping efforts prior to, and following, 12 weeks of treatment. Time-line follow-back procedures were also used to record drinking at baseline and post-treatment. Findings 

IATP yielded higher proportion of days abstinent (PDA) at post-treatment (P < 0.05) than did PCBT, and equivalent heavy drinking days. IATP also elicited more momentary coping responses and less drinking in high-risk situations, as recorded by experience sampling at post-treatment. Post-treatment coping response rates were associated with decreases in drinking. Conclusions 

The IATP approach was more successful than PCBT at training adaptive coping responses for use in situations presenting a high risk for drinking. The highly individualized IATP approach may prove to be an effective treatment strategy for alcohol-dependent patients.

Keywords: Alcohol dependence; CBT; coping skills; experience sampling; individualized treatment; self-monitoring

Document Type: Research article

DOI: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2009.02693.x

Affiliations: 1: Department of Psychiatry, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, CT, USA

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