Women and men veterans' initiation, engagement, and retention in treatment for substance use disorders: A cross-sectional investigation using VHA administrative data

0 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Tracy L. Simpson , Yoanna E. McDowell , Nicholas A. Livingston , Emma I. Brett , Katherine J. Hoggatt , Elena R. Stein , Carol A. Malte
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Abstract

Introduction

More men have substance use disorders (SUD) in the US compared to women; however, the gender gap is closing, including among US veterans. Little information is available about gender differences in patterns of SUD treatment receipt. The current study evaluated gender differences in SUD outpatient, residential, and medication treatment receipt to address critical gaps in the literature.

Methods

Veterans Health Administration patients with SUD diagnoses between 10/01/2014 and 9/30/2018 were included (women = 40,841, men = 615,002). The study tracks treatment initiation, engagement, retention, and treatment transitions for 12 months following study entry. Unadjusted Chi-square tests and logistic regressions, adjusted for race/ethnicity, age study entry year, and facility complexity test for gender differences.

Results

Women had higher initiation, engagement, and retention than men in outpatient and residential settings in unadjusted comparisons. However, after adjustment, women were less likely to initiate, engage, and retain. Post-hoc analyses indicate findings were driven by age and race/ethnicity; specifically, women under 60 and non-Hispanic White and Black women were less likely to initiate or retain in SUD care than men. Women were also less likely to transition through outpatient treatment and utilize opioid use medication; however, women were more likely to transition through residential treatment and utilize alcohol use medication.

Conclusions

Women were found to have lower outpatient and residential SUD treatment receipt and opioid medication utilization but greater alcohol use medication utilization compared to men. Future research is needed to better understand factors leading to these gender differences and to develop tailored treatment approaches to address gender disparities.
女性和男性退伍军人物质使用障碍治疗的开始、参与和保留:使用VHA管理数据的横断面调查
在美国,与女性相比,男性有更多的物质使用障碍(SUD);然而,性别差距正在缩小,包括在美国退伍军人中。关于接受SUD治疗模式的性别差异的信息很少。目前的研究评估了门诊、住院和药物治疗接收中SUD的性别差异,以解决文献中的关键空白。方法纳入2014年1月10日至2018年9月30日期间退伍军人健康管理局诊断为SUD的患者(女性= 40,841,男性= 615,002)。该研究跟踪研究开始后12个月的治疗开始、参与、保持和治疗过渡。未经调整的卡方检验和逻辑回归,调整了种族/民族、年龄、研究进入年份和设施复杂性检验的性别差异。结果在未经调整的比较中,女性在门诊和住院环境中比男性有更高的开始、参与和保留。然而,经过调整后,女性更不可能主动、参与和保留。事后分析表明,研究结果受年龄和种族/民族的影响;具体来说,60岁以下的女性和非西班牙裔白人和黑人女性比男性更不可能开始或保留SUD护理。女性也不太可能通过门诊治疗过渡到使用阿片类药物;然而,女性更有可能通过住院治疗和使用酒精药物来过渡。结论与男性相比,女性的门诊和住院治疗次数和阿片类药物使用率较低,但酒精药物使用率较高。未来的研究需要更好地了解导致这些性别差异的因素,并制定有针对性的治疗方法来解决性别差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of substance use and addiction treatment
Journal of substance use and addiction treatment Biological Psychiatry, Neuroscience (General), Psychiatry and Mental Health, Psychology (General)
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