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| Addiction Treatment Outcomes: Who and What Can You Believe? |
| Feature Articles - Treatment Strategies or Protocols | ||||||||
| Tuesday, 31 May 2005 | ||||||||
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Addiction counselors are sometimes asked, “How successful is your program?” or more globally, “Does addiction treatment really work?” Responses to such questions can be drawn from one’s clinical experience, a study of one’s own program, or from studies reported at professional conferences, in professional trade journals or in scientific publications. The problem is that the conclusions drawn from these multiple sources may be inconsistent or even contradictory.
Reporting addiction treatment outcomes has a long, problem-filled
history. The first addiction treatment outcome study was conducted in 1874 by
Dr. Joseph Turner, founder of the New York State Inebriate Asylum. Subsequent
studies, some involving thousands of treated patients (Chamberlain, 1891;
Crothers, 1893), became commonplace in the nineteenth century. The percentages
of claimed “cures” declined as studies improved methodologically, but honest
reporting of these outcomes conflicted with business interests as new
competitors (private addiction cure institutes, private sanatoria, and bottled
home cures) entered the field claiming 90 to 100 percent cure rates. The
addictions treatment field in the late nineteenth century was plagued by a
tension between the need for objective data to advance scientific know-ledge and
improve treatment protocol versus the need to claim high success rates to market
services and raise funds. William L. White, MA, ( This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it ) is a Senior Research Consultant at Chestnut Health Systems and the author of Slaying the Dragon: The History of Addiction Treatment and Recovery in America.
Mark D. Godley, PhD,
(
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
) has worked in the addiction field for 30 years, and is
the Director of Research at Chestnut Health Systems. This article is published in Counselor,The Magazine for Addiction Professionals, June 2005, v.6, n.3, pp.52-55.
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