Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10510174 | Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Desired adjustment of methadone dose, perceived participation in dosage regulation, and satisfaction with methadone treatment centres were assessed in a sample of opioid-dependent patients from the Valencia Region (eastern Spain). An independent interviewer asked 278 consecutively arriving patients to answer the survey, and 165 (59.4%) completed it. Adjustment of methadone dose was assessed with a â10 to +10 visual analogue scale (VAS-MD); participation in methadone dose regulation, with specific questions; and patient satisfaction, with the Verona Service Satisfaction Scale for methadone treatment (VSSS-MT). The methadone dose (mg/d) prescribed by physicians was (mean ± S.D.) 68.0 ± 30.4. Participants scored â1.0 ± 4.7 on the VAS-MD, indicating a significant downward desired adjustment of methadone dose (95% CI of â1.73 to â0.30). Of the patients surveyed, approximately one-third were, overall, content with their participation in methadone dose regulation. Overall, participants felt slightly satisfied (VSSS-MT = 3.5 ± 0.6) with the centres. Patients treated with a methadone dose of <60 mg/d felt more satisfied than those treated with 60-100 mg/d. Information about dose changes was the only continuous methadone dose variable related with satisfaction that was found in a multiple regression analysis, which accounted for only 2.0% of the variance in VSSS-MT overall scores. In conclusion, patients' opinions on methadone dose and patient satisfaction are only very weakly related when methadone treatment is implemented as in the Valencia Region.
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Authors
José Pérez de los Cobos, Joan Trujols, Juan Carlos Valderrama, Sergi Valero, Teresa Puig,