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African-American and Hispanic alcohol
abusers need more residential alcohol
treatment
The negative consequences of alcohol use and
abuse have a disproportionate impact on
racial and ethnic minorities in the United
States. New research findings indicate that
racial disparities in treatment completion
could be reduced by increasing enrollment in
residential alcohol treatment for African
American and Hispanic alcohol abusers.
Results are published in the November issue
of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental
Research.
“Both the National Longitudinal Alcohol
Epidemiologic Survey from 1991-1992, and the
2001-2002 National Epidemiological Survey on
Alcohol and Related Conditions found that
African Americans have similar or lower
rates of heavy drinking, binge drinking, and
alcohol dependence as White Americans,” said
Ricky N. Bluthenthal, senior scientist at
the RAND Corporation and corresponding
author for the study.
Yet despite these similarities in alcohol
consumption, observed Laura A. Schmidt,
associate professor of health policy in the
School of Medicine at the University of
California, San Francisco, minorities
experience more adverse health and social
consequences as a result of their drinking.
“For example, as a white woman, I might
drink three drinks per day, which might
increase my risk of dying from cirrhosis by
50 percent,” she explained. “A black or
Hispanic woman with the same age or health
status who drinks the same amount as me
might have a 75 percent increased risk of
dying from cirrhosis. We think that this
disproportionate disease burden has
something to do with other factors that ‘go
with’ race/ethnicity, such as poorer
nutrition. This means that a minority person
can do everything possible to avoid
alcohol-related problems – cirrhosis,
criminal victimization, traffic fatalities,
etc. – and still have a higher risk of these
problems compared to whites.”
For this study, researchers analyzed the
discharge records of 10,591
alcohol-treatment patients who attended
publicly funded treatment facilities in Los
Angeles County during 1998 to 2000 in order
to calculate completion rates. The sample
comprised 4,141 African American, 3,120
Hispanic, and 3,330 white patients;
furthermore, 5,795 were in outpatient and
4,796 were in residential treatment.
“This is one of the first studies to find
consistently lower alcohol-treatment
completion rates for African American
patients as compared to White patients in a
large publicly funded alcohol-treatment
system,” said Bluthenthal. “This occurred
regardless of treatment setting, that is,
outpatient or residential treatment.”
Furthermore, African American patients
appeared less likely to be enrolled in
residential alcohol treatment despite having
more severe alcohol abuse characteristics on
average..
“We calculated that if African American
patients were assigned to residential
treatment at the same rate as White
patients,” said Bluthenthal, “the racial
disparity in alcohol-treatment completion
might decline by as much as 20 percent
between African Americans and Whites.” He
added that this would also apply to
Hispanics, although findings indicated a
smaller racial disparity in
alcohol-treatment completion between
Hispanic and white patients.
“Because it is so much harder for a minority
person to get into treatment, only the most
persistent, motivated people are likely to
get into care,” said Schmidt. “Thus, we
would expect that minorities in treatment
have higher completion rates and greater
success in treatment than comparable
minorities. What Dr. Bluthenthal and
colleagues are showing is that, despite all
this, minorities are less likely than whites
to stay in treatment, other factors being
equal. Thus, there are multiple
racial/ethnic disparities in play here:
minorities have a disproportionate risk of
alcohol-related harm, they are less likely
to get treatment, and when they do get
treatment, they are less likely to stay in
it and complete the program.”
Bluthenthal suggested that one way to
increase access to residential treatment for
African American alcohol abusers might be to
more consistently assign alcohol-treatment
patients with higher alcohol-abuse severity
to residential treatment programs, which
generally provide more intense services and
have higher completion rates, as compared to
outpatient treatment programs.
Schmidt agreed. “This is one of several
policies that need to be put in place to
reduce racial/ethnic disparities in alcohol
treatment,” she said. “There are numerous
disparities and therefore, more than one
policy solution is required. My research
shows that the most severely affected
minorities are the least likely to receive
treatment. When they do get treatment, it is
in less intensive settings, and now we see
from this report, for a shorter duration of
time. Despite all this, minorities who drink
at the same levels as whites will experience
higher rates of alcohol-related harm.
Therefore, the need for treatment is greater
in minority communities and yet the care is
diminished on multiple levels. It is
important to underscore that heavy drinking
is not just a problem on its own, but is
also a risk factor for a whole host of
conditions, including coronary heart
disease, stroke, cancers, and trauma.”1;
Schmidt said that another concern is the
growing use of outpatient alcohol treatment
in the US. “The trend towards outpatient
care began in the early 1990s,” she said.
“Currently, about 60 percent of the care for
alcohol problems provided in the US is in
outpatient settings and this figure will
likely grow in the years to come. Based on
what this ACER paper reports, we can expect
to see a widening gap in completion rates
between minorities and whites as more and
more care is delivered in outpatient
settings.”
###
Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research
(ACER) is the official journal of the
Research Society on Alcoholism and the
International Society for Biomedical
Research on Alcoholism. Co-authors of the
ACER paper, “Are Racial Disparities in
Alcohol Treatment Completion Associated with
Racial Differences in Treatment Modality
Entry" Comparison of Outpatient Treatment
and Residential Treatment in Los Angeles
County, 1998 to 2000,” were: Jerry O.
Jacobson of Integrated Substance Abuse
Programs at the University of California at
Los Angeles (at the time of funding); and
Paul L. Robinson of the Research Centers in
Minority Institutions at Charles R. Drew
University of Medicine and Science in Los
Angeles. The study was funded by the
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism, and the National Center for
Research Resources.
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