Journal Article10.1097/00005053-198001000-00006
An improved diagnostic evaluation instrument for substance abuse patients. The Addiction Severity Index.
3.2K
TL;DR: The use of the ASI is suggested to match patients with treatments and to promote greater comparability of research findings, suggesting the treatment problems of patients are not necessarily related to the severity of their chemical abuse.
read more
Abstract: The Addiction Severity Index (ASI) is a structured clinical interview developed to fill the need for a reliable, valid, and standardized diagnostic and evaluative instrument in the field of alcohol and drug abuse. The ASI may be administered by a technician in 20 to 30 minutes producing 10-point problem severity ratings in each of six areas commonly affected by addiction. Analyses of these problem severity ratings on 524 male veteran alcoholics and drug addicts showed them to be highly reliable and valid. Correlational analyses using the severity ratings indicated considerable independence between the problem areas, suggesting that the treatment problems of patients are not necessarily related to the severity of their chemical abuse. Cluster analyses using these ratings revealed the presence of six subgroups having distinctly different patterns of treatment problems. The authors suggest the use of the ASI to match patients with treatments and to promote greater comparability of research findings.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Nonmedical Use of Sedative-Hypnotics and Opiates Among Rural and Urban Women with Protective Orders
Jennifer Cole,TK Logan +1 more
TL;DR: Nonmedical use of sedative-hypnotics and opiates was significantly associated with lifetime cumulative exposure to interpersonal victimization, rural Appalachian residency, past-year use of other substances and other substance-related problems, and lifetime unmet health care needs.
28
Predicting Addiction Severity Index (ASI) Interviewer Severity Ratings for a computer-administered ASI
Stephen F. Butler,Frederick L. Newman,John S. Cacciola,Arlene Frank,Simon H. Budman,A. Thomas McLellan,Sabrina Ford,Jack Blaine,David R. Gastfriend,Karla Moras,Ihsan M. Salloum,Jacques P. Barber +11 more
TL;DR: In this article, regression equations were developed to predict the Interviewer Severity Rating (ISR), a summary score for each of 7 domains of the Addiction Severity Index (ASI), and the resulting 7 Predicted Severity Ratings (PSRs) were tested on 8, standardized vignettes.
28
Inpatient Alcohol Treatment in a Private Healthcare Setting: Which Patients Benefit and at What Cost?
Helen M. Pettinati,Kathleen Meyers,Bradley D. Evans,Charles Ruetsch,Frances N. Kaplan,Jacqueline M. Jensen,Trevor R. Hadley +6 more
TL;DR: Patients with multiple drinking-related consequences were less likely to return to significant drinking in the first 3 months after treatment ended if they had attended inpatient compared to outpatient treatment, suggesting inpatient appeared to have some advantage over outpatient treatment in the early recovery period.
28
Does pregnancy affect outcome of methadone maintenance treatment
TL;DR: Findings are presented from a study examining treatment outcome between pregnant and non-pregnant participants in a metropolitan methadone-maintenance program, which found that a majority of both groups continued to use illicit drugs at least occasionally.
28
Integrating medical and substance abuse treatment for addicts living with HIV/AIDS: evidence-based nursing practice model.
Marcia Andersen,Joseph Paliwoda,Richard Kaczynski,Eugene P. Schoener,Carlton Harris,Cheryl Madeja,Herbert Reid,Christine Weber,Calvin Trent +8 more
TL;DR: Well being, as measured by a Global Well Being Index, was found to improve significantly at 6 months and 12 months and significant improvement was observed on Medical Outcomes Study‐36‐Item Short‐Form Health Survey (SF‐36) measures of general health and health functioning.
27