Treatment for alcohol-related problems: special populations: research opportunities.

Edith S Lisansky Gomberg
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When female and male alcoholics are compared, women report more positive family history, a later onset of drinking and problems, more marital disruption, more comorbidity, etc. The review of treatment outcomes (Vannicelli, 1986) showed few significant gender differences in outcomes. Research recommendations include biological and genetic studies, women's view of and use of therapeutic modalities, and outcome studies of different modalities, including all female facilities. ELDERLY: Medications are used more by older patients, and such patients are more likely to experience adverse drug reactions. In the moderate social use of alcohol, there are conflicting reports and the extent of elderly use awaits decisive study. The etiology of problem drinking by older persons is studied rarely. An attempt has been made to explain onset later in life (vs. earlier onset) based on the stresses of aging (loss, loneliness, health problems, etc.); research results have not been supportive. Consequences of older persons' heavy drinking seems to be most often alcohol-related medical disorders, although there are often familial and social consequences. Atkinson (1995) recommended the development of elder-specific outcome measures, study of the efficacy of different treatment modalities, and study of the efficacy of treatment for patients in elder-specific and mixed age groups, etc. MINORITIES: Each of the federally mandated minority groups in the United States is heterogeneous. The epidemiology of use and abuse of alcohol and other drugs is well studied, but treatment issues are not. AMERICAN INDIANS: There are more than 200 tribes; each has its own customs and culture. Some tribes are abstinent; others have big problems with abuse of alcohol, and other drugs. Orthodox treatment methods, used by professional counselors and therapists, have not worked very well.</p><p><strong>Recommendation: </strong>study of traditional Indian forms of healing practices combined with other treatment; this would be a culture-sensitive model. BLACK AMERICANS: This includes not only African-Americans but people from the Caribbean, Central and South America, etc. Among African-Americans, there is a history of ambivalence toward alcohol: on the one hand, a tolerant \"nightclub culture\" and on the other, church beliefs in temperance and abstinence. There is \"respectable drinking\" and \"problem drinking,\" most often defined as solitary or public drinking. The primary source of support is considered familial, so people tend to be distrustful of therapy from \"strangers.\" They are anonymous in promoting sobriety and study of subcultural norms and the history of slavery. 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引用次数: 44

Abstract

Unlabelled: For the subgroups indicated, a few questions/issues are relevant to all three (women, elderly, minorities): 1. Heterogeneity of the special populations, for example, Hispanic-Americans are from different countries with different cultures. Women and the elderly vary by age, education, income, social class, health status, etc., to say nothing of ethnicity/color/religion. 2. Of therapy modalities, professional and indigenous, which are more efficacious? 3. Are group-specific therapies needed, or will sensitivity to a particular group work as well? WOMEN: Stereotypes and myths have prevailed, for example, the long-standing belief that women have poorer prognoses than male alcoholics. When female and male alcoholics are compared, women report more positive family history, a later onset of drinking and problems, more marital disruption, more comorbidity, etc. The review of treatment outcomes (Vannicelli, 1986) showed few significant gender differences in outcomes. Research recommendations include biological and genetic studies, women's view of and use of therapeutic modalities, and outcome studies of different modalities, including all female facilities. ELDERLY: Medications are used more by older patients, and such patients are more likely to experience adverse drug reactions. In the moderate social use of alcohol, there are conflicting reports and the extent of elderly use awaits decisive study. The etiology of problem drinking by older persons is studied rarely. An attempt has been made to explain onset later in life (vs. earlier onset) based on the stresses of aging (loss, loneliness, health problems, etc.); research results have not been supportive. Consequences of older persons' heavy drinking seems to be most often alcohol-related medical disorders, although there are often familial and social consequences. Atkinson (1995) recommended the development of elder-specific outcome measures, study of the efficacy of different treatment modalities, and study of the efficacy of treatment for patients in elder-specific and mixed age groups, etc. MINORITIES: Each of the federally mandated minority groups in the United States is heterogeneous. The epidemiology of use and abuse of alcohol and other drugs is well studied, but treatment issues are not. AMERICAN INDIANS: There are more than 200 tribes; each has its own customs and culture. Some tribes are abstinent; others have big problems with abuse of alcohol, and other drugs. Orthodox treatment methods, used by professional counselors and therapists, have not worked very well.

Recommendation: study of traditional Indian forms of healing practices combined with other treatment; this would be a culture-sensitive model. BLACK AMERICANS: This includes not only African-Americans but people from the Caribbean, Central and South America, etc. Among African-Americans, there is a history of ambivalence toward alcohol: on the one hand, a tolerant "nightclub culture" and on the other, church beliefs in temperance and abstinence. There is "respectable drinking" and "problem drinking," most often defined as solitary or public drinking. The primary source of support is considered familial, so people tend to be distrustful of therapy from "strangers." They are anonymous in promoting sobriety and study of subcultural norms and the history of slavery. Earlier ethnographic works (Liebow, 1967) were of "street-corner men," slum dwellers, ghetto norms; recommended: studies of middle-class African-American life and drinking behaviors. ASIAN-AMERICANS: A study in Los Angeles reports differences among Chinese, Japanese, Filipinos, and Koreans in drinking beliefs and behavior. Of these groups, the Japanese in Japan and the Japanese-Americans report the largest number of heavy drinkers. It is, however, considered a private matter, even when associated with social problems. Interestingly, there is an organization called the All Nippon Sobriety Association (like Alcoholics Anonymous). RECOMMENDATIONs: studies of generational differences among Japanese-Americans in use and efficacy of treatment. For the Chinese-Americans, who are fairly permissive about older persons' drinking and share a belief in the health benefits of alcohol, a gender/gerontological study is recommended. HISPANIC-AMERICANS: As a total group, they drink more and present more alcohol-related problems than other immigrant minorities. Age, ethnicity, and gender patterns in permissiveness to drink need to be explored. Treatment sought is often in pentecostal churches and Centros for Espiritismo. Hispanics are not likely to seek help in formal clinical settings which emphasize alcohol consumption as the basic, core problem. They are more likely to seek out and be responsive to the perception of their drinking problem as sin and a rejection of Jesus. It is not that minorities do not recognize problems and seek out help. They are not likely to seek out the health profession's offering of outpatient clinics, residential treatments, etc.

酒精相关问题的治疗:特殊人群:研究机会。
未标记:对于所指出的分组,一些问题/议题与所有三个(妇女、老年人、少数民族)有关:特殊人群的异质性,例如,拉美裔美国人来自不同的国家,有着不同的文化。妇女和老年人因年龄、教育、收入、社会阶层、健康状况等而异,更不用说种族/肤色/宗教了。2. 在治疗方式中,专业的和本地的,哪种更有效?3.是否需要针对特定群体的治疗,或者对特定群体的敏感性是否也能起作用?女性:刻板印象和神话盛行,例如,长期以来认为女性的预后比男性更差。当对女性和男性酗酒者进行比较时,女性报告的家族史更积极,饮酒和出现问题的时间更晚,婚姻破裂更多,合并症更多等。对治疗结果的回顾(Vannicelli, 1986)显示在结果上没有显著的性别差异。研究建议包括生物学和遗传学研究,妇女对治疗方式的看法和使用,以及不同方式的结果研究,包括所有女性设施。老年人:老年患者更多地使用药物,这类患者更容易出现药物不良反应。在适度的社会酒精使用方面,有相互矛盾的报告,老年人使用的程度有待于决定性的研究。老年人饮酒问题的病因学研究很少。人们试图根据衰老的压力(损失、孤独、健康问题等)来解释老年痴呆症的发病(相对于老年痴呆症的发病);研究结果并不支持这一观点。老年人大量饮酒的后果似乎最常见的是与酒精有关的疾病,尽管往往有家庭和社会后果。Atkinson(1995)建议制定老年人特异性结局指标,研究不同治疗方式的疗效,研究老年人特异性和混合年龄组患者的治疗疗效等。少数群体:美国联邦政府规定的每一个少数群体都是异质的。使用和滥用酒精和其他药物的流行病学研究得很好,但治疗问题却没有。美洲印第安人:有200多个部落;每个国家都有自己的风俗和文化。有些部落是禁欲的;其他人则有酗酒和滥用其他药物的严重问题。专业咨询师和治疗师使用的正统治疗方法效果不太好。建议:研究印度传统的治疗方法与其他治疗方法相结合;这将是一个文化敏感的模式。美国黑人:这不仅包括非洲裔美国人,还包括来自加勒比海、中美洲和南美洲等地的人。在非裔美国人中,对酒精有着矛盾的态度:一方面是宽容的“夜总会文化”,另一方面是教会对节制和禁欲的信仰。有“体面饮酒”和“问题饮酒”之分,最常被定义为单独饮酒或公共饮酒。支持的主要来源被认为是家庭,所以人们倾向于不信任来自“陌生人”的治疗。他们在提倡清醒、亚文化规范和奴隶制历史的研究方面是匿名的。早期的民族志作品(Liebow, 1967)是关于“街头男人”、贫民窟居民、贫民窟规范;建议:研究非裔美国中产阶级的生活和饮酒行为。亚裔美国人:洛杉矶的一项研究报告了中国人、日本人、菲律宾人和韩国人在饮酒信仰和行为方面的差异。在这些群体中,日本人和日裔美国人酗酒的人数最多。然而,即使与社会问题联系在一起,它也被视为私事。有趣的是,有一个组织叫做全日本戒酒协会(类似于匿名戒酒会)。建议:研究日裔美国人在使用和治疗效果方面的代际差异。对于华裔美国人来说,他们对老年人饮酒相当宽容,并相信酒精对健康有益,建议进行一项性别/老年学研究。拉美裔美国人:作为一个整体群体,他们比其他移民少数民族喝得更多,出现更多与酒精有关的问题。饮酒的年龄、种族和性别模式需要探索。寻求治疗通常是在五旬节派教堂和精神中心。西班牙人不太可能在正式的临床环境中寻求帮助,因为这些环境强调饮酒是基本的核心问题。他们更有可能发现并回应酗酒问题是罪和拒绝耶稣的看法。这并不是说少数民族没有意识到问题并寻求帮助。 他们不太可能寻求医疗行业提供的门诊诊所、住院治疗等服务。
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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