Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
329299 Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment 2009 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

AimsThe aim of this study is to demonstrate the utility of recursive partitioning (RP) for analyzing process and outcome data in drug treatment research. The basic methodology of RP is introduced and applied to the prediction of treatment retention.MethodsA total of 315 individuals randomly assigned to one of two treatment conditions; 289 (91.7%) completed a comprehensive baseline assessment battery. Treatment retention was assessed at a 52-week follow-up interview.FindingsThe RP approach was successful in generating a parsimonious decision tree that predicted drug treatment retention from the 195 input variables. Severity of drug use (as indicated by length of time speedballing), criminal behavior (as indicated by history of property crimes), level of insight, social network, and age at intake were predictive of treatment retention. The model is estimated to explain 32% of the variability in the population.ConclusionsRP supports the notion that there are early indicators of treatment retention and that specific approaches that are tailored to individuals' needs will be potentially more successful in treatment engagement and retention than the typical “one size fits all” approach. The results also demonstrate the utility of RP for the detection of complex relationships between diverse and interdependent predictors.

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