Female Private Residential Treatment Centres
Female Private Residential and the effectiveness of rehab drug or residential substance abuse treatment for women was examined. Using data from the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment’s Residential Women and Children/Pregnant and Postpartum Women (RWC/PPW) Cross-Site Study and two other recent national studies.
Private Residential Treatment Centers success was defined as post treatment abstinence from further drug or alcohol use. Measured through in-person follow-up interviews conducted 6-12 months after each client’s discharge.
Female Private Residential
Despite differences in rehab drug treatment programs, client profiles, follow-up intervals. Plus data collection methods, and other factors, all three studies found high treatment success rates. Ranging narrowly from 68% to 71% abstinent–among women who spent six months or more in treatment.
Success rates were lower, and between-study differences were larger, for clients with shorter stays in treatment. Controlling for salient client and treatment project characteristics, strong associations between length of stay in treatment. And post treatment abstinence rate were found in all three studies. Suggesting that women’s length of stay in Rehab Drug or Private Residential Treatment Centers, a major determinant of treatment effectiveness. In further analysis of RWC/PPW data, treatment completion was also found to be an important outcome factor.
Among clients who remained in treatment for at least three months. Those who achieved their treatment goals in three to five months abstinence outcomes. These were as good as those for clients who took more than six months to complete their treatment (76%-78% abstinent). Plus substantially better than those for clients who did not complete treatment (51%-52% abstinent).
Notably, however, most of the RWC/PPW clients who successfully completed Private Residential Treatment Centers (71%) required six months or more to do so.
There is also the theory that female only facilities help those still vulnerable and not yet comfortable being around males. This could be specifically for those where active addiction behaviour has been mainly supporting a male partner, violent or not.
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