Abstract

Background:Narcotics addiction has commonly been regarded as a single-substance phenomenon.Aims and Methods:Follow-up interviews on a sample of 32 heroin addicts who had been in nonmethadone treatment for narcotics addiction at our Institute (spring 2007) were used to examine alcohol use and substitution of alcohol for heroin. Groups were classified as: no use of alcohol, irregular consumption and daily consumption, with aim to identify background and baseline factors related to substitution. We analyzed data relevant to the aims of our research in two stages of addiction career (before the treatment and 6 months after the beginning of treatment)Results:One fourth of the sample (8 patients) used alcohol as a substitution pattern. The substitution was found to be related to higher levels of alcohol problems before addiction. The results showed a strong relationship between substitution and parental alcohol problems and family quarrels which had existed before the treatment, as well as 6 months after they entered the treatment Aggressive behavior of the subjects who used alcohol in the substitution pattern caused problems with law in the both stages of addiction career. All 8 patients fulfilled criteria for depression (HAM/D below 21).Conclusions:The results confirmed the validity of substitution as a powerful construct in identifying behavioral differences before and after addition.The phenomenon of substance substitution during the treatment should be considered not as evidence of the treatment failure but as an additional aspect of the addiction that must be addressed within the therapeutic framework.

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