Drug & alcohol counselling play important role in helping people with addictions

Embargoed until Tuesday, June 25, 2002

Annual Meeting: Psychiatry Today
Monday 24th to Thursday 27th June 2002
Cardiff International Arena, Cardiff

 

A study in South Wales has found that drug counselling has an important role to play in helping people come off drugs and alcohol.

 

No studies to date have looked at the effect of having preliminary counselling before in-patient detoxification, although there is some evidence that detoxification is associated with improvement after contact with drug/alcohol services.
 
The authors assessed 65 clients admitted over a six month period to the Cefn Coed Unit in Swansea. They looked at the amount of time each client had spent on the waiting list, the referring agency, whether they were on probation, and whether they had had preliminary counselling. Six months later, local specialist counselling services were contacted to see which clients had engaged with follow-up, and what their current drug/alcohol status was.
 
The researchers found that preliminary counselling was significantly associated with controlled substance use after detoxification, but not with abstinence. Those clients engaged with services after detoxification tended to be either abstinent or using in a controlled way. Improvement was not linked to time spent on the waiting list, the referring agency, or whether the clients were on probation.
 
The authors recommend that future service development should be aimed at strengthening liaison between the Cefn Coed Unit and drug and alcohol counselling agencies.
 

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© 2005 Royal College of Psychiatrists