학술논문

Outcomes of treatment of socially rehabilitated methadone maintenance patients in physicians’ offices (medical maintenance): Follow-up at three and a half to nine and a fourth years
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
Journal of General Internal Medicine. March 1994 9(3):127-130
Subject
substance abuse
methadone
opiates
heroin
medical maintenance
methadone maintenance
Language
English
ISSN
0884-8734
1525-1497
Abstract
Objective: To determine whether selected socially rehabilitated former heroin addicts maintained on methadone can continue successful rehabilitation while maintained on methadone by primary care physicians rather than licensed clinics. This procedure has been termed “medical maintenance.”Design: Cohort study with 42–111 months of follow-up.Setting: Offices of hospital staff physicians (internists or family practitioners).Patients: The 100 patients met extensive entry criteria, including five or more years in conventional methadone maintenance treatment; stable employment or other productive activity; verifiable financial support; and no criminal involvement, use of illegal drugs, or excessive alcohol use within three or more years.Measurements and main results: Outcome measures used were retention in treatment, discharge for one of several reasons, lost medication incidents, and substance abuse. At one, two, and three years of treatment, 98, 95, and 85 patients, respectively, remained in medical maintenance. Cumulative proportional survival in treatment was 0.735±0.048 at five years and 0.562±0.084 at nine years. After 42–111 months, 72 patients remained in good standing; 15 patients had unfavorable discharges (11 for cocaine use, three for misuse of medication, and one for administrative violations); seven voluntarily withdrew from methadone in good standing (after receiving it for 91–24.4 years); four died; one transferred to a chronic care facility; and one voluntarily left the program.Conclusions: Carefully selected methadone maintenance patients in medical maintenance have a high retention rate and a low incidence of substance abuse and lost medication. Voluntary withdrawal from methadone maintenance after one or two decades is possible. The authors believe that medical maintenance should be made available to appropriate patients in other localities.