The Women's Recovery Group Study: a Stage I trial of women-focused group therapy for substance use disorders versus mixed-gender group drug counseling.

Shelly F Greenfield, Elisa M Trucco, R Kathryn McHugh, Melissa Lincoln, Robert J Gallop
Author Information
  1. Shelly F Greenfield: Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston MA 02115, USA. shelly_greenfield@hms.harvard.edu

Abstract

The aim of this Stage I Behavioral Development Trial was to develop a manual-based 12-session Women's Recovery Group (WRG) and to pilot test this new treatment in a randomized controlled trial against a mixed-gender Group Drug Counseling (GDC), an effective manual-based treatment for substance use disorders. After initial manual development, two pre-pilot groups of WRG were conducted to determine feasibility and initial acceptability of the treatment among subjects and therapists. In the pilot stage, women were randomized to either WRG or GDC. No significant differences in substance use outcomes were found between WRG and GDC during the 12-week group treatment. However, during the 6-month post-treatment follow-up, WRG members demonstrated a pattern of continued reductions in substance use while GDC women did not. In addition, pilot WRG women with alcohol dependence had significantly greater reductions in average drinks/drinking day than GDC women 6 months post-treatment (p<.03, effect size=0.81). While satisfaction with both groups was high, women were significantly more satisfied with WRG than GDC (p<.009, effect size=1.11). In this study, the newly developed 12-session women-focused WRG was feasible with high satisfaction among participants. It was equally effective as mixed-gender GDC in reducing substance use during the 12-week in-treatment phase, but demonstrated significantly greater improvement in reductions in drug and alcohol use over the post-treatment follow-up phase compared with GDC. A women-focused single-gender group treatment may enhance longer-term clinical outcomes among women with substance use disorders.

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Grants

  1. K24 DA019855/NIDA NIH HHS
  2. R01 DA015434/NIDA NIH HHS
  3. DA 019855/NIDA NIH HHS
  4. DA 15434/NIDA NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adult
Aged
Alcohol-Related Disorders
Central Nervous System Stimulants
Cocaine-Related Disorders
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Counseling
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Gender Identity
Humans
Male
Marijuana Abuse
Middle Aged
Pilot Projects
Psychotherapy, Group
Secondary Prevention
Substance-Related Disorders
Treatment Outcome

Chemicals

Central Nervous System Stimulants

Word Cloud

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