Patterns of treatment utilization and methamphetamine use during first 10 years after methamphetamine initiation |
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Authors: | Mary-Lynn Brecht Katherine LovingerDiane M. Herbeck M.A. Darren Urada Ph.D. |
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Affiliation: | UCLA Integrated Substance Abuse Programs, Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90025, USA |
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Abstract: | The study examined joint trajectories of methamphetamine (MA) use and substance abuse treatment utilization and identified differences among pattern groups for a sample of 348 treated for MA use. Results from group-based trajectory modeling showed that treatment utilization during the first 10 years after initiation of MA use could be categorized into three distinctive patterns: about half the MA users have a pattern of low treatment utilization; one-fourth follow a quicker-to-treatment trajectory with higher probability of treatment during the first 5 years of MA use and less treatment in the next 5 years; and one-fourth have a slower-to-treatment trajectory with more treatment during the second half of the 10-year period. Four MA use patterns were identified: consistently low use, moderate, and high use, as well as a decreasing use pattern. Periods of greater likelihood of treatment participation were associated with periods of decreasing or lower frequency of MA use. |
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Keywords: | Treatment patterns Methamphetamine use patterns Trajectories Treatment success Treatment resistance |
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