Understanding the client characteristics of Aboriginal residential alcohol and other drug rehabilitation services in New South Wales, Australia

Abstract Background Aboriginal alcohol and other drug residential rehabilitation (residential rehabilitation) services have been providing treatment in Australia of over 50 years. However, there are no studies in Australia or internationally that document characteristics of clients attending Indigen...

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Main Authors: Douglas B. James, KS Kylie Lee, Tania Patrao, Ryan J. Courtney, Katherine M. Conigrave, Anthony Shakeshaft
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13722-020-00193-8
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spelling doaj-d36904878124494d86ecabeb568cfc8f2020-11-25T01:19:12ZengBMCAddiction Science & Clinical Practice1940-06402020-07-0115111410.1186/s13722-020-00193-8Understanding the client characteristics of Aboriginal residential alcohol and other drug rehabilitation services in New South Wales, AustraliaDouglas B. James0KS Kylie Lee1Tania Patrao2Ryan J. Courtney3Katherine M. Conigrave4Anthony Shakeshaft5National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, The University of New South WalesFaculty of Medicine and Health, Addiction Medicine, NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Indigenous Health and Alcohol, The University of SydneySchool of Public Health, University of QueenslandNational Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, The University of New South WalesFaculty of Medicine and Health, Addiction Medicine, NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Indigenous Health and Alcohol, The University of SydneyNational Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, The University of New South WalesAbstract Background Aboriginal alcohol and other drug residential rehabilitation (residential rehabilitation) services have been providing treatment in Australia of over 50 years. However, there are no studies in Australia or internationally that document characteristics of clients attending Indigenous residential rehabilitation services worldwide. This is the first multi-site paper to describe key client characteristics of six Indigenous (hereafter Aboriginal Australians as the term recommended by the Aboriginal Health and Medical Research Council of New South Wales) residential rehabilitation services in Australia. Methods All recorded client admissions between 1 January 2011 to 31 December 2016 were considered from six operating services in the Australian state of New South Wales. Data collected were classified into categories based on demographics, treatment utilisation, substance use, mental health and quality of life characteristics. Means, median and percentages were calculated (where appropriate). Results There were 2645 admissions across the six services in the study period, with an average of 440 admissions per year across all services. Participants were aged between 26 to 35 years, with fewest participants aged 46 +. Program length ranged from 12 to 52 weeks (mean of 12 weeks). The completion rates and length of stay for each service ranged from less than two to more than 12 weeks. The principal drug of choice was alcohol and amphetamines in half of the services. Not all services used them, but a range of tools were used to measure treatment, substance use and mental health or quality of life outcomes. Conclusion This study is the first internationally to describe the key features of multiple Aboriginal residential rehabilitation services. The variation in tools used to collect client data made it difficult to compare client characteristics across services. Future research could explore predictors of treatment completion, identify opportunities for standardisation in client assessments and validate cultural approaches of care. These efforts would need to be guided by Aboriginal leadership in each service.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13722-020-00193-8IndigenousResidential rehabilitationAlcoholAmphetaminesDrug
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Douglas B. James
KS Kylie Lee
Tania Patrao
Ryan J. Courtney
Katherine M. Conigrave
Anthony Shakeshaft
spellingShingle Douglas B. James
KS Kylie Lee
Tania Patrao
Ryan J. Courtney
Katherine M. Conigrave
Anthony Shakeshaft
Understanding the client characteristics of Aboriginal residential alcohol and other drug rehabilitation services in New South Wales, Australia
Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
Indigenous
Residential rehabilitation
Alcohol
Amphetamines
Drug
author_facet Douglas B. James
KS Kylie Lee
Tania Patrao
Ryan J. Courtney
Katherine M. Conigrave
Anthony Shakeshaft
author_sort Douglas B. James
title Understanding the client characteristics of Aboriginal residential alcohol and other drug rehabilitation services in New South Wales, Australia
title_short Understanding the client characteristics of Aboriginal residential alcohol and other drug rehabilitation services in New South Wales, Australia
title_full Understanding the client characteristics of Aboriginal residential alcohol and other drug rehabilitation services in New South Wales, Australia
title_fullStr Understanding the client characteristics of Aboriginal residential alcohol and other drug rehabilitation services in New South Wales, Australia
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the client characteristics of Aboriginal residential alcohol and other drug rehabilitation services in New South Wales, Australia
title_sort understanding the client characteristics of aboriginal residential alcohol and other drug rehabilitation services in new south wales, australia
publisher BMC
series Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
issn 1940-0640
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Background Aboriginal alcohol and other drug residential rehabilitation (residential rehabilitation) services have been providing treatment in Australia of over 50 years. However, there are no studies in Australia or internationally that document characteristics of clients attending Indigenous residential rehabilitation services worldwide. This is the first multi-site paper to describe key client characteristics of six Indigenous (hereafter Aboriginal Australians as the term recommended by the Aboriginal Health and Medical Research Council of New South Wales) residential rehabilitation services in Australia. Methods All recorded client admissions between 1 January 2011 to 31 December 2016 were considered from six operating services in the Australian state of New South Wales. Data collected were classified into categories based on demographics, treatment utilisation, substance use, mental health and quality of life characteristics. Means, median and percentages were calculated (where appropriate). Results There were 2645 admissions across the six services in the study period, with an average of 440 admissions per year across all services. Participants were aged between 26 to 35 years, with fewest participants aged 46 +. Program length ranged from 12 to 52 weeks (mean of 12 weeks). The completion rates and length of stay for each service ranged from less than two to more than 12 weeks. The principal drug of choice was alcohol and amphetamines in half of the services. Not all services used them, but a range of tools were used to measure treatment, substance use and mental health or quality of life outcomes. Conclusion This study is the first internationally to describe the key features of multiple Aboriginal residential rehabilitation services. The variation in tools used to collect client data made it difficult to compare client characteristics across services. Future research could explore predictors of treatment completion, identify opportunities for standardisation in client assessments and validate cultural approaches of care. These efforts would need to be guided by Aboriginal leadership in each service.
topic Indigenous
Residential rehabilitation
Alcohol
Amphetamines
Drug
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13722-020-00193-8
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