Adults in remission one year after seeking professional help for alcoholism are less likely to die in the next 15 years than adults in relapse at that time
Adults in remission one year after seeking professional
help for alcoholism are less likely to die in the next 15 years than adults in
relapse at that time, according to an article in the October issue of the journal
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research.
The likelihood of dying is also reduced for alcoholics
who undergo a longer duration of outpatient treatment or Alcoholics Anonymous
participation during the first year, provided they are doing well at the one-year
mark.
“The initial year is critical,” said lead author Christine
Timko, PhD, a research scientist at the Veterans Health Administration in Palo
Alto, Calif. “Getting help early and getting enough help early is a key factor
in recovery from alcohol problems and in reducing mortality.”
Previous studies have shown that adults treated for alcohol
use disorders have a death rate that is 1.6 to 4.7 times greater than the mortality
rate for the general American population.
In this study, researchers followed 628 adults in the
San Francisco Bay area who had not received prior treatment for an alcohol use
disorder. All of the participants were seeking treatment voluntarily and about
half were women. On average, participants were in their mid-thirties at baseline.
Over the 16-year follow-up period, 19.3 percent of participants
died. The mortality rate in this population was 1.4 times greater than expected
for the general population, but it was lower than the rate reported in other treatment
studies.
“Most studies include a combination of long-term chronic
users and first-timers,” said Timko. “We think the mortality ratio was lower than
expected because these were people who had not had help before and were catching
their alcohol problems early.”
Not surprisingly, those who initially had more severe
alcohol-related problems were at greater risk of dying. Men were more likely to
die than women, and single adults were more likely to die than married adults.
When the researchers controlled for these characteristics,
they found that the participants who had no drinking-related problems or were
in remission at one year were significantly less likely to die over the next 15
years than those who had problems caused by their alcohol use or who were still
abusing alcohol.
Certain combinations of one-year outcome and treatment
were also predictive of a lower risk of death. Participants who received more
than eight weeks of outpatient treatment or who attended Alcoholics Anonymous
meetings for more than 16 weeks and who had no drinking-related problems at one
year were less likely to die than other groups.
While a longer duration of outpatient treatment was associated
with a reduced risk of death, the reverse was true for inpatient treatment. Those
who spent less than three weeks in inpatient treatment and were doing well at
one year were less likely to die over the 16-year study period than those with
a longer duration of inpatient treatment, even if they were doing well at one
year.
“Long-term inpatient treatment is a red flag,” said University
of Massachusetts professor of medicine Judith Ockene, PhD. “We need to think about
how to keep patients out of long-term care, which gets back to the tremendously
important role of the physician and the health care system. If we want to prevent
the downstream effects of alcohol abuse we really need to start intervening much
more upstream.”
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