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Journal Article

Citation

Cotton AJ, Shipley LJ, Glynn LH, Tracy J, Saxon AJ. Am. J. Addict. 2017; 26(1): 50-52.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/ajad.12479

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Background and Objectives

A "callback" requires patients to bring in take-home methadone doses for inspection. An opioid treatment program (OTP) quality-improvement project examined random versus "for-cause" callbacks.

Method

Eighty-two random callbacks and 60 for-cause callbacks were conducted among patients enrolled in an OTP (Nā€‰=ā€‰183).

Results

Among patients with more take home doses, 6% of random callbacks versus 44% of for-cause callbacks were failed. Among patients with fewer take home doses, 36% of for-cause callbacks were failed.

Discussion and Conclusions

For-cause callbacks are more useful than random ones.

Scientific Significance

For-cause callbacks based on clinical judgment detect methadone misuse. (Am J Addict 2017;26:50-52)


Language: en

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