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An Observational Study of a Digital Substance Use and Recovery Program. | LitMetric

An Observational Study of a Digital Substance Use and Recovery Program.

Psychiatr Serv

Women's College Hospital Institute for Health System Solutions and Virtual Care, Toronto (Khan, Chu, Brual, Dang-Nguyen, Oladimeji, Bolea-Alamañac, Tadrous, O'Riordan, Rubenstein, Carlin, Longum, Gibson, Abejirinde); Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto (Khan, Kthupi, Abejirinde); Women's College Research Institute, Toronto (Kthupi); Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto (Bolea-Alamañac); Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Toronto, Toronto (Tadrous); Patient Advisors Network, Toronto (O'Riordan, Rubenstein, Carlin).

Published: January 2025

Objective: Digital substance use treatment programs present an opportunity to provide nonresidential care for people with problematic substance use. In June 2021, the provincial government in Ontario provided free access to Breaking Free Online (BFO), a digital behavioral change program for people with substance use disorders.

Methods: An observational study was conducted with retrospective data to characterize clients' use and engagement patterns in BFO and examine changes in self-reported outcomes.

Results: In total, 6,370 individuals registered for BFO between June 2021 and October 2022, of whom 3,650 completed the intake assessment. Most of these clients were self-referred (64%), with 37% having been referred by health service providers. More than one-half of the clients (52%) resided in Ontario West or East regions. Support for addressing problematic alcohol use was the most requested program (40%). By October 2022, about 44% of the clients had completed between one and four of 12 program strategies. Analysis revealed significant changes in pre-post scores across four validated scales (p<0.001), indicating a decrease in anxiety and depression, an increase in quality of life, an improvement in recovery progression, and a decrease in severity of symptoms associated with substance use disorders.

Conclusions: BFO clients with higher completion rates had the most improvement across the scales used; however, clients with lower and medium completion rates also had improvements. Because of the shame and stigma associated with substance use, digital supports with low barriers to entry can help support the autonomy, privacy, and preferences of individuals seeking help for problematic substance use.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/appi.ps.20230427DOI Listing

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