These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: [Alcohol dependence syndrome and before-discharge intervention method (BDIM)--Report 2. Statistical analysis of BDIM].
    Author: Ino A.
    Journal: Nihon Arukoru Yakubutsu Igakkai Zasshi; 2004 Feb; 39(1):78-88. PubMed ID: 15058097.
    Abstract:
    The present author has developed the structured Before-Discharge Intervention Method (BDIM), a modified version of the intervention methods by Johnson and Picard in an effort to achieve the patient's awareness of his/her problem drinking. The BDIM first involves the patient's family members and helps them recover from co-dependence on the patient's alcoholism and secondly, instructs them to write structured letters to the patient. Each letter should include a few episodes of recent and past drinking problems, and family members' concern and love for the patient, and family members' hope for his/her patient's abstinence. Family members read the letter with emotion and tears in a joint therapist, patient, family members session. We have reported the two-year-post-treatment outcome of group I (the BDIM-treated group) and group II (the BDIM-untreated group) here. Patients living with their spouse or significant other in group I of the series of new patients did significantly better than their counterpart in group II on two treatment outcome variables, that is, family members' attendance at hospital follow-up sessions and/or self-help group meetings, abstinence of the patients who and whose family members attended hospital follow-up sessions and/or self-help group meetings. Patients living with their spouse or significant other in group I of the series of all patients did significantly better than their counterpart in group II on three treatment outcome variables, that is, patients' attendance at hospital follow-up sessions and/or self-help group meetings, family members' attendance at hospital follow-up sessions and/or self-help group meetings, abstinence of the patients who attended hospital follow-up sessions and/or self-help group meetings. But we noted no other statistically significant difference between groups I and II in any of the other two subgroups of discharged patients or in any of the treatment outcome variables. In group I in the series of new patients, 49% of the patients who lived with their spouse and/or significant other attended hospital follow-up sessions and/or self-help group meetings, and 41% of them showed abstinence. In group I in the series of all patients, 49% of inpatients who lived with their spouse and/or significant other attended hospital follow-up sessions and/or self-help group meetings, and 40% of them showed abstinence. We grant that the current study was not conducted in a random patient assignment design and, therefore, needs to be interpreted with some caution. Further research is appropriate.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]