Addiction Medicine: Closing the Gap between Science and Practice

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reduction).* Similarly, patients who reported a
need for child care services and had their needs
addressed experienced a greater reduction in
their substance use severity score compared to
patients with child care needs who were not
matched to needed services (45 percent vs. 20
percent).† 416


The Use of Technology in Addiction Treatment and Disease Management ...................


An emerging approach to identifying, treating
and managing addiction--the utilization of online
computer tools and other technology-based
interventions to enhance access and delivery--is
showing some promising results.^417 These
include telephone contact with treatment
providers and e-mail, text messaging,
smartphone apps and online support groups.^418


Online approaches that employ evidence-based
practices via Web sites or tele- or video-
conferencing offer key advantages. They can
provide psychosocial therapies to patients at
lower cost than traditional face-to-face
approaches.^419 They allow patients who live far
from specialty treatment providers or who lack
resources to access psychosocial therapies or
supplemental services in a convenient manner.^420


Researchers are just beginning to investigate the
utility of technology-based services for patients
with addiction. While most existing studies are
methodologically weak or flawed,^421 a
randomized controlled trial of a digitally-
delivered smoking cessation intervention found
significantly higher long-term abstinence rates
compared to a control group receiving only a
self-help booklet (22.3 percent vs. 13.1
percent).^422 Another randomized control study
found that patients enrolled in a methadone
maintenance program who participated in
Internet-based group therapy sessions reported



  • There was a 41 percent reduction among patients


who never reported needing the services. Patients
were not randomly assigned to receive services.
† There was a 31 percent reduction among those who


never reported needing the service.


greater satisfaction with the program than
patients who participated in traditional, face-to-
face group therapy sessions; reductions in
positive drug urine tests during the six-week
study were comparable between the two groups,
suggesting that Internet-based therapy may be an
effective treatment tool.^423 A recent study found
that a smartphone-based support system shows
potential for preventing relapse in addiction
involving alcohol;^424 however, further research
is needed on this particular program and, more
generally, on the outcomes of technology-based
services and how they compare to traditional
service delivery methods.^425

Concerns about technology-based services
include the risks to privacy and confidentiality
of information transmitted over the Internet,
safety and efficacy, and issues of licensing
posed by treatment delivered across state
lines.^426

Public Attitudes about Addictive Substances and the Need for Addiction Treatment ....


Although the American public appears to be
supportive of assuring that individuals with
addiction receive effective addiction treatment,
the view of most individuals about the relative
need for treatment for individuals who use
addictive substances and what constitutes
effective treatment does not match the science of
best practices.

Perceptions of the Relative Need for Treatment Based on Substance of Addiction.


CASA Columbia’s NABAS found significant
differences in respondents’ views of the type and
extent of substance use that indicates a substance
use problem and the need to seek treatment.
Public perceptions do not reflect the continuum
of substance use or distinguish between risky
use and the need for intervention versus
addiction and the need for treatment:

 The majority of respondents reported that
any use of the illegal drugs heroin (84.0
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