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Journal Article

Citation

Fernandez-Montalvo J, Lopez-Goñi JJ, Azanza P, Cacho R. Am. J. Addict. 2014; 23(4): 399-406.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1521-0391.2013.12117.x

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Background and Objectives This study explored the characteristics of a representative sample of patients who were addicted to drugs and analyzed the differential profile of addicted women and men.

METHODS A sample of 195 addicted patients (95 female and 100 male) who sought outpatient treatment in a Spanish clinical center was assessed. Information on sociodemographic status, consumption patterns and associated characteristics was collected using the European Addiction Severity Index (EuropASI).

RESULTS The results showed statistically significant differences between groups. Demographically, the differences were centered on employment, with more labor problems in the female group. Regarding addiction severity, the EuropASI results showed statistically significant differences in both the interviewer severity ratings (ISR) and composite scores (CS). Women experienced more severe impacts in the medical, family social and psychiatric areas. By contrast addicted men had more severe legal problems than addicted females did.

CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that, women who seek outpatient treatment in a clinical center presented with more severe addiction problems than men did. Moreover, they reported more significant maladjustment in the various aspects of life explored. (Am J Addict 2014;23:399-406) © American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Adult; Female; Male; adult; Spain; human; social interaction; Severity of Illness Index; mental health; female; male; Young Adult; Substance-Related Disorders; Cost of Illness; family; cannabis; suicidal ideation; depression; sex difference; Sex Characteristics; suicide attempt; Employment; addiction; disease severity; drug abuse; psychology; cocaine; review; alcohol consumption; major clinical study; job satisfaction; hallucination; anxiety disorder; social aspect; psychotropic agent; drug dependence; employment; diamorphine; drug dependence treatment; cost of illness; Behavior, Addictive; sexual development; Addiction Severity Index; Substance Abuse Treatment Centers; young adult; severity of illness index

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