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Residential services differ from many community psychosocial services in that the former almost always exclude clients who are actively using substances either controlled or prescribed. As such, residential services will almost exclusively form part of an aftercare package, whilst community psychosocial services may cater for clients at all stages of the cycle of change.
RESIDENTIAL SERVICES
The 'Effectiveness Review' (1995) identifies four modalities of residential service:
The first three of these share a number of key features:
In-patient treatment is more medically based and provides detoxification and counselling (individual and/or group work). Lengths of stay are rarely over 2 months with an average of four weeks. Services are based in hospital psychiatric wards, specialist in-patient units and the voluntary sector. The average size of such units is 12 beds.
As for in-patient detoxification, residential psychosocial rehabilitation appears to present a higher probability of successful outcome than does community based rehabilitation; this is however, very different from saying that one setting is more or less cost-effective than the other. In the current political context it seems probable that the push to create increased treatment places with limited resources may occur at the expense of residential placements.
A 1996 follow-up study, conducted as part of the National Treatment Outcome Research Study (NTORS) reported the following (Gossop M et al, 1999):
There are several implications of the above results.
thus indicating possible greater effectiveness of residential as compared to community services. Additionally they had a greater impact on infection risk, and acquisitive crime rates.
Clients whose main problem drug is cocaine form 6% of UK treatment admissions, a proportion which has doubled in three years. Amphetamine is the main drug for 8% of clients, while approximately 20% of clients use cocaine and 15% amphetamine as part of poly-drug misusing pattern. Residential care is an effective option for clients presenting with stimulant misuse, especially when clients stay at least one month in short programmes and three months in longer ones.
The issue of retention is central to effectiveness, and can be seen as a function of how the service relates to its clients, rather than the reverse. Services which actively engage with clients, provide supportive environments and well structured programmes, which are clear about their policies and their therapies, and which tailor their activities (or at least allow residents to do so) to individual needs produce better outcomes (see appendix 1, page 114: Key Characteristics of Effective Services).
COMMUNITY SERVICES
Community aftercare services come in various forms including 'drop-in' and counselling services. 'Structured day programmes' are a relatively new package of treatment providing a more rigorous and intensive intervention, and will tend to require regular attendance 4 to 5 days weekly and engagement with a structured programme of care which lasts anywhere between 6 and 24 weeks. They provide a new alternative to residential rehabilitation for clients who are not prepared to contemplate a long period away from their home environment. Paradoxically, the main requirement for maintenance of change for many clients will be removal from their drug-using environment for a period of time. There are five main types of structured day care service that have developed to date:
See appendix 1, page 114 for SCODAs quality standards for structured day programmes.
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