학술논문

Daily Telephone Monitoring Compared with Retrospective Recall of Alcohol Use among Patients in Early Recovery.
Document Type
Article
Source
American Journal on Addictions. Jan2011, Vol. 20 Issue 1, p63-68. 6p. 1 Chart, 2 Graphs.
Subject
*ALCOHOL drinking
*SELF-monitoring (Psychology)
*RETROSPECTIVE studies
*COMORBIDITY
*INTERACTIVE voice response (Telecommunication)
Language
ISSN
1055-0496
Abstract
Most studies comparing frequent self-monitoring protocols and retrospective assessments of alcohol use find good correspondence, but have excluded participants with significant comorbidity and/or social instability, and some have included abstainers. We evaluated the correspondence between measures of alcohol use based on daily interactive voice response (IVR) telephone monitoring and a 28-day modification of the Form-90 (Form-28). Participants were 25 outpatients with alcohol use disorder and significant PTSD symptomatology . Overall correlations between the IVR and Form-28 on days drinking and total standard drink units (SDUs) were strong for the entire sample and the subsample of drinkers (n = 7). Day-to-day correspondence between IVR and Form-28 was modest, but much stronger for the most recent week assessed than for the prior 3 weeks. Finally, the drinkers reported significantly greater total SDUs and heavy drinking days on the Form-28 than via IVR. The results indicate a need for further refinement of IVR methodology for treatment seeking populations as well as caution when retrospectively assessing drinking over time periods longer than a week among these individuals. (Am J Addict 2010;00:1-6) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]