4.2 Review

A realist review of residential treatment for adults with substance use disorder

Journal

DRUG AND ALCOHOL REVIEW
Volume 42, Issue 4, Pages 827-842

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/dar.13615

Keywords

realist review; residential treatment; substance use

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Completion of residential treatment for substance use disorder (SUD) can lead to improvements in substance use and mental health. However, there is limited understanding of which interventions work best for clients. This study conducted a realist review to identify program theories that explain the effectiveness of residential treatment for SUD, and found that the need to belong, meaning in life, and self-determination theory were the best explanations for outcomes.
IssuesCompletion of residential treatment for substance use disorder (SUD) relates to improvements in substance use and mental health. Findings from systematic reviews have been equivocal about which interventions work best for clients. There has been limited attention to the theories that explain the effectiveness of residential treatment. ApproachWe conducted a realist review of the literature to identify program theories that would explain successful and unsuccessful outcomes from residential treatment for SUD. The unit of analysis was context-mechanism-outcome (CMO). Inclusion criteria were studies of residential treatment of more than 30 days for adults with SUD. Pharmacological studies were excluded. Key FindingsWe identified 24 studies from 5748 screened. The studies were from settings comprising Indigenous programs, faith-based programs, psycho-social interventions and therapeutic communities and were conducted in North America, Scandinavia, Continental Europe and Australasia. We chose six CMO configurations as the best explanations for outcomes from residential treatment. Theories that best explained the mechanisms of change were the need to belong, meaning in life, and self-determination theory. ImplicationsPrevious research has noted similar outcomes from different residential treatment interventions, but has not been able to explain these similarities. In contrast, our findings suggest that the outcomes can be explained by causal mechanisms that apply across all programs, regardless of the philosophy of treatment. ConclusionWe identified six CMO configurations whose mechanisms of change could be explained by three overarching theories-the need to belong, meaning in life and self-determination theory. The findings apply across ethnicities and genders.

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