Context and craving during stressful events in the daily lives of drug-dependent patients.

Psychopharmacology (Berl)

Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics Research Branch, Intramural Research Program, National Institute on Drug Abuse, Baltimore, MD, USA.

Published: September 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding the relationship between stress and substance-use disorders can enhance mobile treatment strategies.
  • The study focuses on individual stress episodes rather than general background stress, using smartphone entries from participants in opioid-agonist treatment over 16 weeks.
  • Results indicated that higher stress severity is linked to increased opioid cravings, with stress occurring more in social settings and active environments, while internet use appears somewhat protective.
  • Overall, the types of stressors experienced vary from previous studies on continuous stress but still correlate with cravings for drugs.

Article Abstract

Rationale: Knowing how stress manifests in the lives of people with substance-use disorders could help inform mobile "just in time" treatment.

Objectives: The purpose of this paper is to examine discrete episodes of stress, as distinct from the fluctuations in background stress assessed in most EMA studies.

Methods: For up to 16 weeks, outpatients on opioid-agonist treatment carried smartphones on which they initiated an entry whenever they experienced a stressful event (SE) and when randomly prompted (RP) three times daily. Participants reported the severity of stress and craving and the context of the report (location, activities, companions). Decomposition of covariance was used to separate within-person from between-person effects; r sizes below are within-person.

Results: Participants (158 of 182; 87%) made 1787 stress-event entries. Craving for opioids increased with stress severity (r  = 0.50). Stress events tended to occur in social company (with acquaintances, 0.63, friends, 0.17, or on the phone, 0.41) rather than with family (spouse, -0.14; child, -0.18), and in places with more overall activity (bars, 0.32; outside, 0.28; walking, 0.28) and more likelihood of unexpected experiences (with strangers, 0.17). Being on the internet was slightly protective (-0.22). Our prior finding that being at the workplace protects against background stress in our participants was partly supported in these stressful-event data.

Conclusions: The contexts of specific stressful events differ from those we have seen in prior studies of ongoing background stress. However, both are associated with drug craving.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5709189PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00213-017-4663-0DOI Listing

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