Drug and alcohol treatment providers' views about the disease model of addiction and its impact on clinical practice: A systematic review
- PMID: 29239048
- DOI: 10.1111/dar.12632
Drug and alcohol treatment providers' views about the disease model of addiction and its impact on clinical practice: A systematic review
Abstract
Issues: Addiction treatment providers' views about the disease model of addiction (DMA), and their contemporary views about the brain disease model of addiction (BDMA), remain an understudied area. We systematically reviewed treatment providers' attitudes about the DMA/BDMA, examined factors associated with positive or negative attitudes and assessed their views on the potential clinical impact of both models.
Approach: Pubmed, EMBASE, PsycINFO, CINAHL Plus and Sociological Abstracts were systematically searched. Original papers on treatment providers' views about the DMA/BDMA and its clinical impact were included. Studies focussing on tobacco, behavioural addictions or non-Western populations were excluded.
Key findings: The 34 included studies were predominantly quantitative and conducted in the USA. Among mixed findings of treatment providers' support for the DMA, strong validity studies indicated treatment providers supported the disease concept and moral, free-will or social models simultaneously. Support for the DMA was positively associated with treatment providers' age, year of qualification, certification status, religious beliefs, being in recovery and Alcoholics Anonymous attendance. Greater education was negatively associated with DMA support. Treatment providers identified potential positive (e.g. reduced stigma) and negative (e.g. increased sense of helplessness) impacts of the DMA on client behaviour.
Implications/conclusion: The review suggests treatment providers may endorse disease and other models while strategically deploying the DMA for presumed therapeutic benefits. Varying DMA support across workforces indicated service users may experience multiple and potentially contradictory explanations of addiction. Future policy development will benefit by considering how treatment providers adopt disease concepts in practice.
Keywords: addiction; attitudes of health personnel; brain disease; medicalisation; treatment.
© 2017 Australasian Professional Society on Alcohol and other Drugs.
Comment in
-
An argument against the implementation of an 'overarching universal addiction model' in alcohol and other drug treatment.Drug Alcohol Rev. 2018 Sep;37(6):721-722. doi: 10.1111/dar.12704. Epub 2018 Apr 16. Drug Alcohol Rev. 2018. PMID: 29659091 No abstract available.
-
A persistent contradiction in treatment providers' views on addiction.Drug Alcohol Rev. 2018 Sep;37(6):723-725. doi: 10.1111/dar.12705. Epub 2018 Apr 17. Drug Alcohol Rev. 2018. PMID: 29665132 No abstract available.
-
One model to rule them all? Governing images in the shadow of the disease model of addiction.Drug Alcohol Rev. 2018 Sep;37(6):726-728. doi: 10.1111/dar.12706. Epub 2018 Apr 26. Drug Alcohol Rev. 2018. PMID: 29700871 No abstract available.
-
Implications of treatment providers' varying conceptions of the disease model of addiction: A response.Drug Alcohol Rev. 2018 Sep;37(6):729-730. doi: 10.1111/dar.12844. Epub 2018 Jul 11. Drug Alcohol Rev. 2018. PMID: 29998464 No abstract available.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
Medical
