INVESTIGADORES
ACION Laura
artículos
Título:
How the states stack up: Disparities in substance abuse outpatient treatment completion rates for minorities
Autor/es:
ARNDT, S; ACION, L; WHITE, K
Revista:
DRUG AND ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE
Editorial:
ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
Referencias:
Lugar: Amsterdam; Año: 2013
ISSN:
0376-8716
Resumen:
BackgroundThis study was an exploratory investigation of state-level minority disparities in successfully completing outpatient treatment, a major objective for attending substance abuse treatment and a known process outcome measure.MethodThis was a retrospective analysis of state discharge and admission data from the 2006 to 2008 Treatment Episode Datasets-Discharge (TEDS-D). Data were included representing all discharges from outpatient substance abuse treatment centers across the United States. All first treatment episode clients with admission/discharge records meeting inclusion criteria who could be classified as White, Latino, or Black/African American were used (n = 940,058).ResultsStates demonstrated racial and ethnic disparities in their crude and adjusted completion rates, which also varied considerably among the states. Minorities typically showed a disadvantage. A few states showed significantly higher completion rates for Blacks or Latinos.ConclusionsRealistically, a variety of factors likely cause the state race/ethnic differences in successful completion rates. States should investigate their delivery systems to reduce completion disparities.