Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies Center for Health Policy/Center for Primary Care and Outcomes Research Stanford University


CHP/PCOR Publications


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Older and Younger Patients with Substance Use Disorders: Baseline Functioning, Outpatient Mental Health Service Use, and 12-Month Treatment Outcomes

Journal Article

Authors
P.L. Brennan
A. Nichol
Rudolf H. Moos - Stanford University

Published by
Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, Vol. 17, page(s) 42-48
2003


This observational study compared a nationwide sample of older patients with substance use disorders (n = 3,598; age > 55) with a demographically and diagnostically matched sample of younger patients on initial functioning, subsequent outpatient mental health service use, and 12-month follow-up outcomes. Older patents were initially functioning a well as or better than younger patients according to substance use, psychiatric, family, and legal criteria. The groups received comparable amounts of outpatient mental health care. At a 12-month follow-up, older patients generally had better substance use and functioning outcomes than did younger patients. The findings suggest that older patients with substance use disorders are keeping pace with demographically and diagnostically comparable younger patients in obtaining specialized outpatient mental health services and that they have positive treatment prognoses.