Brief Screening for Co-Occurring Disorders among Women Entering Substance Abuse Treatment
Date Issued
2006-9-7Publisher Version
10.1186/1747-597X-1-26Author(s)
Lincoln, Alisa K
Liebschutz, Jane M
Chernoff, Miriam
Nguyen, Dana
Amaro, Hortensia
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https://hdl.handle.net/2144/2991Citation (published version)
Lincoln, Alisa K, Jane M Liebschutz, Miriam Chernoff, Dana Nguyen, Hortensia Amaro. "Brief screening for co-occurring disorders among women entering substance abuse treatment" Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy 1:26. (2006)Abstract
BACKGROUND. Despite the importance of identifying co-occurring psychiatric disorders in substance abuse treatment programs, there are few appropriate and validated instruments available to substance abuse treatment staff to conduct brief screen for these conditions. This paper describes the development, implementation and validation of a brief screening instrument for mental health diagnoses and trauma among a diverse sample of Black, Hispanic and White women in substance abuse treatment. With input from clinicians and consumers, we adapted longer existing validated instruments into a 14 question screen covering demographics, mental health symptoms and physical and sexual violence exposure. All women entering treatment (methadone, residential and out-patient) at five treatment sites were screened at intake (N = 374). RESULTS. Eighty nine percent reported a history of interpersonal violence, and 70% reported a history of sexual assault. Eighty-eight percent reported mental health symptoms in the last 30 days. The screening questions administered to 88 female clients were validated against in-depth psychiatric diagnostic assessments by trained mental health clinicians. We estimated measures of predictive validity, including sensitivity, specificity and predictive values positive and negative. Screening items were examined multiple ways to assess utility. The screen is a useful and valid proxy for PTSD but not for other mental illness. CONCLUSION. Substance abuse treatment programs should incorporate violence exposure questions into clinical use as a matter of policy. More work is needed to develop brief screening tools measures for front-line treatment staff to accurately assess other mental health needs of women entering substance abuse treatment
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Copyright 2006 Lincoln et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.Collections