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Original Articles

Absolute Abstinence as a Treatment Outcome in Servicemen with Alcohol Dependence: A Retrospective Cohort Study

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Abstract

Background: Within India’s military medical framework, alcohol dependence syndrome (ADS) is deemed a treatable medical illness incompatible with military service, and complete abstinence is the only acceptable successful treatment outcome. Objective: This study was designed to identify factors which were able to differentiate treatment outcomes of abstinence and relapse among ADS patients in a military framework. Method: Recognizing personal incentives to misrepresent alcohol consumption, abstinence, and relapse outcomes were established using official reports from a patient’s parent unit, in combination with biochemical parameters and clinical examination. Patients serially admitted for ADS treatment or follow-up review were surveyed, and their socio-demographic and alcohol consumption profiles, coping styles, life events and specific relapse precipitants were recorded and compared as contributory variables in a cognitive-behavioral model of ADS. From this survey of 140 patients, membership to abstainer or relapser groups was then predicted using a discriminant analysis. Results: 34% of patients achieved early absolute abstinence. No baseline socio-demographic or drinking profile distinctions existed between abstainers and relapsers. Differences were forthcoming on coping styles, life-event, and relapse-precipitant exposure measures. Stepwise discriminant analysis produced a final equation comprising 10 independent variables (including two positive life event measures), which predicted an abstinence/relapse outcome with an 86% and 79% hit-rate (original and cross-validated). Conclusion: Using prevailing cognitive-behavioral constructs, early absolute abstinence emerged as an actionable objective and an achievable goal without any contributory socio-demographic predilections. This preliminary evaluation suggests it is a tenable and realistic target of current ADS treatment programs.

Acknowledgments

We thank Mrs Deepti Kalra and Mr Chetan Prajapati for their support in the statistical analysis of our data. There was no funding support for this project.

Disclosure statement

There are no conflicts of interest for any author on this article.

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