Anti-depression therapy could help people suffering from alcohol and drug misuse
Behavioural therapy may be missing link in drug and alcohol recovery according to new study
Patients at a South Yorkshire drug and alcohol treatment centre have seen their recovery and likelihood for abstinence boosted thanks to a pioneering trial with anti-depression therapy.
Many people who suffer substance misuse issues are clinically depressed. This alters their response to drug and alcohol treatment.
Limited research has taken place in the past but the findings of a new two-year study, carried out at Doncaster’s Aspire Drug & Alcohol Services, suggests that ‘behavioural activation therapy’ could be a key missing link to improving the mental health outcomes of those battling substance misuse problems.
What is Behavioural activation?
Behavioural activation focuses on how our environment shapes our actions and impacts our mental health.
By deliberately practising certain behaviours we can ‘activate’ a positive emotional state. The theory is that engaging in fulfilling activities, such as volunteering or walking, can create a feelgood factor and lead to the addiction being replaced with a healthier alternative.
Behavioural activation associated with reduced depression
Some 59 per cent of those who took part in the trial attended at least one session and there was 95 per cent adherence to the guidelines set out.
Behavioural activation was associated with significantly reduced depression in those patients at a follow-up 12 weeks later. Participants also used less illicit substances on top of their prescribed medication.
The researchers concluded that this therapy may add clinical benefit to the care provided for patients who have substance misuse and depression problems and that it is an area which needs further research.
The study was jointly carried out by staff from Aspire, a partnership between Rotherham Doncaster and South Humber NHS Foundation Trust (RDaSH) and registered charity The Alcohol & Drug Service.
The therapy was compared to ‘treatment as usual’ in the Aspire service and all the participants had both substance misuse and depression symptoms.
Stuart Green, Service Manager with Aspire, said: “The results are very promising, particularly for patients who are trying to hold down a job or reduce illicit use on top of their medications. The study has raised exciting prospects for the care provided for this cohort of patients across the country, with potential improvements through the talking therapies on offer, as well as returning potential gains on treatment costs and harm reduction.”
Dr Kellett, one of the investigators, said: “To conduct a randomised controlled trial in a busy substance misuse service is a major achievement and shows that key workers can effectively integrate behavioural activation into the help they offer. Drug and alcohol problems are notoriously difficult to overcome, especially when they are complicated by depression.”
The investigators looked into practicality and potential clinical benefits of behavioural activation being delivered by drug and alcohol workers to patients having community-based drugs and alcohol treatment.
Dr Delgadillo, who is also Director of Psychological Therapies Research with the Grounded Research team at RDaSH, added: “This new research makes us optimistic about the potential to help many people with these problems by training drug and alcohol workers to adopt behavioural activation as part of their treatment toolkit.”
The findings were last month (March 2022) published in the highly influential Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment.