NACD
Hawkins House
Hawkins St.
Dublin 2
Tel: +353 1 6354283
Email: nacd@nacd.ie
 |
|
 |
NEW RESEARCH SHOWS SIGNIFICANT REDUCTIONS IN DRUG USE AFTER ONE YEAR’S
TREATMENT
PRESS RELEASE
Issue date 11th September 2006
Media Contact Ger Nash (087 2716816) / Pat Montague (087 2549123) Montague
Communications, tel. 01 830 3116
NEW RESEARCH SHOWS SIGNIFICANT REDUCTIONS IN DRUG USE AFTER ONE YEAR’S
TREATMENT
National Advisory Committee on Drugs (NACD) says investment in drug treatment
is paying off
Ireland’s first national longitudinal study on drug misuse treatment
is showing that significant reductions in drug use and involvement in
crime by participants were achieved after one year of treatment. The research
was commissioned by the NACD in fulfilment of Action 99 of the National
Drugs Strategy and was carried out by the National University of Ireland
Maynooth. Dr Catherine Comiskey, Principal Investigator presented the
first findings from ROSIE which is an acronym for Research Outcome Study
in Ireland evaluating drug treatment effectiveness. Researchers recruited
404 opiate users when they started drug treatment (between September 2003
and July 2004) and followed them over one year. Interviews were carried
out when the opiate user entered drug treatment, after 6 months and after
12 months.
Launching the ROSIE Findings 1: Summary of 1-year outcomes, Mr Noel
Ahern TD, Minister of State with responsibility for the National
Drugs Strategy said, “I welcome this timely research which
provides much needed information on how well people do when they
go for drug treatment. Expanding the provision of drug services has
been a cornerstone of the National Drugs Strategy. The Government
commitment of funding to tackling drug misuse over the last 10 years
is now showing benefit, however, we will continue to watch trends
and respond to an ever changing drugs misuse environment.”
75% (n=305) of the study group were interviewed at 12 months, and the
key findings include:
- Significant reductions in heroin and other drug use were
observed in the followed-up study population 1-year after treatment
intake
- 27% of those followed up were abstinent from all drugs excluding
alcohol after 1-year compared to 7% at treatment intake
- Extensive reductions in injecting drug use were observed;
both the number of days participants injected and the number of times
per day reduced
- Substantial reduction in the percentage of people reporting
involvement in acquisitive crime from 31% at treatment intake to
14% at 1-year
- Improvements in physical and mental health were observed
- Study participants had significantly increased contact with
GP, employment and housing/homeless services
- A decrease in contact with A&Es, social and welfare services
was also observed
Dr Des Corrigan, NACD Chairperson, said,
“We have met with the Minister
and outlined our main conclusion to him that investment in opiate treatment
services leads to benefits to the individual drug user, to their family
and to the rest of the community and that this investment must be continued.
The NACD has funded the continuation of the study to provide information
on the participants, 3-years after entry to treatment.”
Further findings will be published from the study in the coming months.
ENDS
Notes to the Editor:
- The Minister of State has responsibility for the National
Drugs Strategy and Community Affairs at the Department of Community,
Rural and
Gaeltacht
Affairs and for Housing and Urban Renewal at the Department
of Environment, Heritage and Local Government.
- This research was commissioned by the NACD in 2002 and following
open tender, the contract was awarded to Dr Catherine Comiskey
and NUI Maynooth.
- The study is fulfilment of NACD responsibility in relation
to Action 99 of the National Drugs Strategy 2001-2008: ‘To commission
further outcome studies within the Irish setting to establish the
current impact of methadone treatment on both individual health and
on offending
behaviour. Such studies should be an important tool in determining
the long term value of this treatment.’
- Fieldwork for the study started with recruitment in March
2003 into the pilot testing of the research instruments. Full recruitment
continued
from September 2003 to July 2004. The ROSIE study recruited 404
opiate users on entry into three-index treatments; methadone maintenance/reduction
(53.2%, n=215) structured detoxification (20%, n=81) and abstinence-based
treatment (20.3%, n=82). In addition, a sub-sample of opiate users
was
recruited from needle-exchanges (6.4%, n=26). These modalities
were part of the tender brief from the NACD as they were considered
to represent
the most widely implemented interventions for opiate users in Ireland.
Research methodology:
The methodology used is a prospective, longitudinal, observational
study. Participants were interviewed at the three time periods using
a pre-prepared interview schedule, which examined key outcome measures
including:
- Drug use (including drug type, frequency and quantity of
use);
- General health (a 10-point physical & psychological health
assessment);
- Social functioning (employment, accommodation, involvement
in crime);
- Harm (injecting behaviour & experience of overdose) and;
- Mortality (participant/contact feedback & checking non-followed–up
participants against General Death Register).
ENDS
For further information: please contact Gerald Nash
(087 2716816) / Pat Montague (087 2549123) at Montague Communications,
tel. 01 8303116.
 |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
|