Title: Drug and Alcohol Treatment Outcomes in Older Adults
1Drug and Alcohol Treatment Outcomes in Older
Adults
- Derek D. Satre, Ph.D.
- Jennifer Mertens, M.A.
- Sujaya Parthasarathy, Ph.D.
- Constance Weisner, Dr.PH., M.S.W.
- University of California, San Francisco and
- Kaiser Permanente Division of Research
2Study Support
- Studies were supported by the National
Institute on Drug Abuse (R01 DA08728 and R37
DA10572) and the National Institute on Alcohol
Abuse and Alcoholism (R37 AA10359). - The first author was supported by a National
Institute on Drug Abuse training grant (T32
DA07250) and center grant (P50 DA09253). - The Drug and Alcohol Research Team at the Kaiser
Division of Research and the staffs of the Kaiser
Chemical Dependency Recovery Programs provided
essential support for these studies.
3Key Older AdultTreatment Research Gaps
- Clinical needs of older adults in treatment
- Studies of private programs
- Factors associated with treatment success
- Gender differences
- Long term outcomes
- Cost impacts
4Research Questions
- How are older patients different from others at
baseline and at 6-month follow-up? - How do older patients differ by gender?
- How are 5-year outcomes of older adults in
treatment different from those of other patients? - How do health service utilization and cost offset
associated with treatment differ by age group?
5Sample
- 1204 patients at Kaiser completed CD treatment
intakes at outpatient facilities in Sacramento,
from 1994 to 1996. (Day Hospital Study) - -Weisner et al., 2000
- Drug testing was used to validate self-report
- 80 of patients completed six-month follow-up
- response rate increased with age 77 of younger,
83 of middle-aged, and 91 of older adults
6Treatment Program
- Randomized to day hospital outpatient or
lower-intensity outpatient care - Abstinence-based, 12-step informed, group format
included education, relapse prevention and
family-oriented therapy - Individual counseling and physician appointments
were available as needed
7Theoretical Framework for Analyses
- Treatment outcome is determined by
- Individual characteristics
- Treatment
- Extra-treatment factors
- How are older adults different from other
patients in these domains that influence outcome?
8Analyses
- Compared three age groups
- 736 patients ages 17-39, mean age 30.4 (sd
6.3) - 379 patients ages 40-54, mean age 45.1 (sd
3.8) - 89 patients ages 55-81, mean age 61.6 (sd
6.0) - Examined gender differences within the older
adult group - Tested predictors of abstinence using logistic
regression
9Key Baseline Age Differences
- Older adults (55-81)
- Married, Caucasian, retired
- ASI score means (vs. younger adults)
- Higher alcohol severity
- Lower drug severity
- Greater medical problems
- Fewer social and family problems
- Less psychiatric distress (ASI and SCL-66)
- More likely to have abstinence goal
- -Satre et al., 2003
10Length of Stay in Treatment
- Treatment length was measured in days
- Older and middle-aged stayed longer than younger,
p
11Abstinence Rates at Six Months
- Significant overall age group differences,
p .03
12Factors Associated with Greater Age, and with
Abstinence at Six Months
- Being married
- Dependence criteria not met
- Less hostility on SCL-66
- Abstinence goal
- Greater length of stay
- (Age was NS)
13Implications
- Older adults bring several strengths to treatment
that younger adults lack, such as lower hostility
and greater abstinence motivation, and they stay
in treatment longer - However, these advantages do not translate into
substantially higher abstinence rates
14Why Study Older Women?
- Fastest growing segment of the population
- Heavy users of health services
- Concerns about prescription drug use
- May be more sensitive to alcohol or drugs than
men - May have different treatment needs and access
issues
15Gender Differences in Six-Month Outcome
- N 92 (29 women and 63 men)
- Alcohol dependent adults age 55 and over
- Data drawn from two outcome studies (Day Hospital
Study and Integrated Care Study) to increase
sample size -Weisner et al., 2000, 2001.
16Baseline Characteristics of Older Women versus
Older Men
- Lower income (53 vs. 33 earn under 40K)
- Not married (38 vs. 62 married)
- Later onset of heavy drinking (5) (age 35 vs.
28) - Comparable baseline alcohol consumption (16 days
per month of 5 drinks) - Comparable tranquilizer use (25 vs. 29)
- Perhaps more distress (78 vs. 60 anxiety, NS)
- Comparable abstinence goal (100 vs. 90)
- -Satre et al., 2004a
17Length of Stay by Gender
- Older women stayed an average of 24 days longer
in treatment than older men (NS)
18Abstinence at Six Months by Gender
- 79 of older women abstinent at six months, vs.
54 of older men (p
19Clinical Implications for Older Women
- Strengths
- Abstinence goal
- Length of stay
- Good abstinence outcomes
- Special needs
- Social support (living alone)
- Economic support
- Depression and anxiety treatment
20Day Hospital Sample at Five Years
- 77 of the sample completed 5-year follow-up
- Older adults more likely to maintain Kaiser
membership (91 vs. 80, 59) - Mortality by age group
- 1 of younger
- 5 of middle-aged
- 11 of older
- -Satre et al., 2004b
21Five Year Outcomes
- Older adults had lower legal and family/social
ASI scores than younger adults - No difference on other ASI scores
- Higher 30-day and 1-year abstinence rates than
younger adults (all substance diagnoses) - No age difference in abstinence among those only
dependent on alcohol
2230-day Abstinence Rates at Five Years by Age Group
- Significant overall age group differences, p
.02
2330-day Abstinence at Five Years by Age and Gender
24Age Differences in Social Networks
25Predictors of Abstinence at Five Years
- Female gender
- Length of stay
- Nobody encouraged drinking or drug use
- Not significant
- Age group
- CD diagnosis
- Treatment intensity
- Married at year five
- Kaiser membership at year five
26Five-Year Study Key Points
- Older women have the best outcome
- Greater length of stay in treatment has long-term
benefits - Older adults show strengths and weakness in
social networks
27Proposed Intervention
- Based on profile of social networks
- Lower AA use in older adults
- Activate or expand informal support
- Supplement mixed-age program
- Age-specific interpersonal psychotherapy group (K
award study)
28Medical Conditions
- Study compared CD patients in treatment to
demographically matched control from the Kaiser
membership - One third of medical conditions examined were
more prevalent in CD patients, especially - Hypertension, liver cirrhoses, COPD, asthma,
injuries, lower back pain, arthritis, headache,
depression, anxiety, psychosis -
-Mertens et al., 2003
29Medical Conditions in Patients Age 55 and Over
- CD patients had higher rates than age- and
sex-matched controls - Ischemic heart disease
- Depression
- Anxiety
-
30Health Care Utilization and Cost
- Records of CD patients were examined 18 months
pre- and post-intake - Compared to utilization and cost records in a
non-patient control group, using automated health
plan records - Examined age group differences
-
-
-Parthasarathy et al., 2001
31Utilization and Cost Findings
- Greater age was positively associated with
pre-treatment cost in both samples - Post-treatment, decline in cost was larger in the
treatment sample than in the matched sample for
those aged 40 to 49, but not in older age groups
32Areas for Further Investigation in Older Adults
- Improving outpatient CD treatment
- Social network intervention
- 9 and 11 year Day Hospital study follow-up
- Remission, alcohol vs. drug use
- How CD (and treatment) affects health
- Health conditions and psychiatric disorders
- Services utilization and cost
- Primary care study
- Dual diagnosis study funded by RWJF
33References
- Mertens, J. R., Lu, Y. W., Parthasarathy, S.,
Moore, C., Weisner, C. (2003). Medical and
psychiatric conditions of alcohol and drug
treatment patients in an HMO. Archives of
Internal Medicine, 163, 2511-2517. - Parthasarathy, S., Weisner, C., Hu, T.W.,
Moore, C. (2001). Association of outpatient
alcohol and drug treatment with health care
utilization and cost Revisiting the offset
hypothesis. Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 62,
89-97. - Satre, D. D., Mertens, J. R., Areán, P. A.,
Weisner, C. (2003). Contrasting outcomes of older
versus middle-aged and younger adult chemical
dependency patients in a managed care program.
Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 64, 520-530. - Satre, D. D., Mertens, J. R., Weisner, C.
(2004a). Gender differences in older adult
treatment outcomes for alcohol dependence.
Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 65, 638-642.
34References (cont.)
- Satre, D. D., Mertens, J. R., Areán, P. A,
Weisner, C. (2004b). Five-year alcohol and drug
treatment outcomes of older adults versus
middle-aged and younger adults in a managed care
program. Addiction, 99, 1286-1297. - Weisner, C., Mertens, J., Parthasarathy, S.,
Moore, C., Hunkeler, E. M., Hu, T.-W. Selby, J.
V. (2000) The outcome and cost of alcohol and
drug treatment in an HMO day hospital versus
traditional outpatient regimens. Health Services
Research, 35, 791-812. - Weisner, C., Mertens, J., Parthasarathy, S.,
Moore, C., Lu, Y. (2001) Integrating primary
medical care with addiction treatment a
randomized controlled trial. Journal of the
American Medical Association, 286, 1715-1723. - Contact Derek Satre, Ph.D., UCSF, 401
Parnassus, Box 0984-OVS, San Francisco, CA 94143.
Email dereks_at_lppi.ucsf.edu