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darp.html
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Highlights
Title: National Drug Abuse Reporting Program
and Follow-up Outcomes
Principal Investigators: Saul
B. Sells, Ph.D. and D. Dwayne
Simpson, Ph.D.
Funded by: National Institute of Mental Health/National
Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Project Period: 1968 to 1989
This longitudinal project was based on the Drug Abuse Reporting Program
(DARP), the first national evaluation effort of community-based treatment
agencies. The original data system consisted of approximately 44,000 admissions
to 52 federally-supported treatment agencies from 1969 to 1973. The study
population included clients from the major treatment modalities: methadone
maintenance, therapeutic community, outpatient drug free, and detoxification,
as well as a comparison intake only group. Earlier treatment evaluation
phases of this 20-year project helped establish that treatment works and
that the longer clients stay in treatment, the better they function afterwards.
To study long-term addiction careers, a sample of daily opioid (primarily
heroin) users admitted to treatment at 18 different DARP agencies throughout
the United States in 1969-1972 was followed up 6 years later, and again
at 12 years. Eighty percent of the 12-year follow-up sample were located
and personal interviews were completed with 490 respondents.
It was found that improvements in behavioral functioning occurred throughout
the first 6-year posttreatment follow-up period. These improvements stabilized
between Years 6 and 12, and only about one-fourth of the sample was still
addicted to daily opioid use in Year 12. At that time, pretreatment sociodemographic
and background measures, as well as type of DARP treatment, were no longer
related to drug use, crime, employment, and other behavioral outcomes.
Length of addiction (defined as the time between first and last daily
opioid use) ranged from 1 to 34 years, and on average, subjects had been
in treatment on six different occasions in the past. Half of the total
sample was addicted 9.5 years or longer, yet 59% never had a period of
continuous daily use that exceeded 2 years. Only 27% reported continuous
addiction periods that lasted more than 3 years.
Three-fourths of the addicts studied had previously experienced at least
one relapse to daily opioid use after temporary abstinence. Among those
who had ever temporarily quit daily opioid use at least once, 85% had
done so while in a drug abuse treatment program, 78% had quit while in
jail or prison, 69% had temporarily quit on their own (without treatment),
and 41% had quit while in a hospital for medical treatment.
The most frequent reasons cited for quitting addiction involved psychological
and emotional coping problems. Ex-addicts reported they had "become
tired of the hustle" (rated as being important by 83% of the sample)
and needing a change after "hitting bottom" (80%). Other reasons
cited as being important were "personal or special events" such
as a marriage or the death of a friend (64%), fear of being sent to jail
(56%), and the need to meet family responsibilities (54%).
Altogether, the various phases of this research program spanned 20 years
and resulted in over 100 papers in books, journals, and monographs.
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DARP
Publication Lists
Selected Publications
Results of the final phase of this 20-year project were published in
1990 in a book entitled Opioid Addiction and Treatment: A 12-year Follow-up
(edited by D. D. Simpson and S. B. Sells, Krieger Publishing Co.). This
book is available from IBR. Overview of 12-Year outcome studies (Simpson & Sells, 1990) [Book overview: (PDF: 28K / 7 pages)]
Simpson, D. D., Chatham, L. R., & Brown, B. S. (1995). The role of
evaluation research in drug abuse policy. Current Directions in Psychological
Science: A Journal of the American Psychological Society, 4(4), 123-126.
Simpson, D. D. (1993). Drug treatment evaluation research in the United
States. Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 7(2), 120-128.
[Abstract]
Simpson, D. D., & Sells, S. B. (1982). Effectiveness of treatment
for drug use: An overview of the DARP research program. Advances in
Alcohol and Substance Abuse, 2(1), 7-29. [Abstract]
[Full article (PDF: 2.5mg
/ 23 pages)]
S. B. Sells & D. D. Simpson (Eds.). (1976). The effectiveness
of drug abuse treatment: Vols. 3-5. Cambridge, MA: Ballinger.
See also:
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