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Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages 313-318 (June 2004)


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Network therapy: Decreased secondary opioid use during buprenorphine maintenance

Marc Galanter, M.D.Corresponding Author Informationemail address, Helen Dermatis, Ph.D., Linda Glickman, Ph.D., Robert Maslansky, M.D., M.Brealyn Sellers, M.D., Erna Neumann, M.A., R.N.C., Claudia Rahman-Dujarric, B.A.

Received 29 December 2003; received in revised form 27 February 2004; accepted 11 March 2004.

Abstract 

Network therapy (NT) employs family members and/or friends to support compliance with an addiction treatment carried out in office practice. This study was designed to ascertain whether NT is a useful psychosocial adjunct, relative to a control treatment, for achieving diminished illicit heroin use for patients on buprenorphine maintenance. Patients agreeing to randomization to either NT (N = 33) or medication management (MM, N = 33) were inducted onto short-term buprenorphine maintenance and then tapered to zero dose. NT resulted in significantly more urine toxicologies negative for opioids than MM (65% vs. 45%) and more NT than MM patients (50% vs. 23%) experienced a positive outcome relative to secondary heroin use by the end of treatment. The use of NT in office practice may therefore improve the effectiveness of eliminating secondary heroin use during buprenorphine maintenance. It may also be useful in enhancing compliance with an addiction treatment regimen in other contexts.

Division of Alcoholism and Drug Abuse, New York University Department of Psychiatry, NYU Medical Center, New York, NY, USA

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +1-212-263-6960; fax: +1-212-263-8285

PII: S0740-5472(04)00025-X

doi:10.1016/j.jsat.2004.03.002


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