Health services for HIV/AIDS, HCV, and sexually transmitted infections in substance abuse treatment programs.

The National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network conducted this study, part of protocol CTN-0012, to determine the availability of and factors associated with infection-related health services in substance abuse treatment settings. In a cross-sectional descriptive design, state policies, reimbursement for providers, state level of priority, and treatment program characteristics were studied via written surveys of administrators of substance abuse treatment programs and of state health and substance abuse departments. Data from health departments and substance abuse agencies in 48 states and from 269 substance abuse treatment programs revealed that HIV/AIDS services are more frequent than hepatitis C virus or sexually transmitted infection-related services, and that nonmedical services are more frequent than medical services. While the availability of infection-related health services is associated with medical staffing patterns, addiction pharmacotherapy services, and state priorities, reimbursement was the most significant determining factor.

These findings suggest that greater funding of these health services in substance abuse treatment settings, facilitated by supportive state policies, represents an effective response to the excess morbidity and mortality of these substance use-related infections.

Related protocols: CTN-0012

Categories: Community health services, CTN primary outcomes, Health services research, Hepatitis C, HIV/AIDS, Sexually transmitted diseases
Tags: Article (Peer-Reviewed)
Authors: Brown, Lawrence S. Jr.; Kritz, Steven Allan; Goldsmith, R. Jeffrey; Robinson, James A.; Alderson, Donald; Rotrosen, John
PMCID: PMC1888517
PMID: 17639646
Source: Public Health Reports 2007;122(4):441-451. [doi: 10.1177/003335490712200404]