학술논문

Service Users' Views and Experiences of Alcohol Relapse Prevention Treatment and Adherence: New Role for Pharmacists?
Document Type
Article
Source
Alcohol & Alcoholism. Sep2022, Vol. 57 Issue 5, p602-608. 7p.
Subject
*OCCUPATIONAL roles
*MEDICAL rehabilitation
*PSYCHOLOGY of alcoholism
*FOCUS groups
*ALCOHOL-induced disorders
*TELEPHONES
*RESEARCH methodology
*PATIENTS
*INTERVIEWING
*EXPERIENCE
*MEDICAL care use
*TREATMENT effectiveness
*REWARD (Psychology)
*PATIENT compliance
*THEMATIC analysis
*BEHAVIOR modification
*COGNITIVE therapy
DISEASE relapse prevention
Language
ISSN
0735-0414
Abstract
Aims To understand service users' views and experiences of alcohol relapse prevention medication, views of a telephone behavioural modification intervention delivered by pharmacists and the use of Contingency Management (CM) to support acamprosate adherence following assisted alcohol withdrawal. Methods Four focus groups were conducted within four alcohol treatment and recovery groups across England (UK), with service users with lived experience of alcohol dependence (26 participants). Semi-structured topic guide was used to explore participants' views and experiences of alcohol relapse prevention medication, a telephone behavioural modification medication intervention delivered by pharmacists, and the use of CM to support acamprosate adherence. These were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim and thematically analysed inductively and deductively. Results Four themes were identified: concerns about support and availability of alcohol relapse prevention medication; lack of knowledge and understanding about acamprosate treatment; positive perceptions of acamprosate adherence telephone support from pharmacists; and negative perceptions of CM to support acamprosate adherence. There were misunderstandings about acamprosate's mode of action and strong negative beliefs about CM. However, most were positive about pharmacists' new role to support acamprosate adherence. Conclusion This study highlighted challenges service users face to commence alcohol relapse prevention medication. It appears service users could benefit from a pharmacist-led telephone intervention to improve understanding about acamprosate medication, particularly, if delivered in an engaging and motivating way. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]