 Drug Rehab and Alcohol Rehabilitation Success Rates
I am writing this article since
a question I am asked on a daily basis by potential clients and doctors
referring people is, “what is your success rate?” The only honest answer anyone
can give someone is “I don’t know”.
There is a huge problem with
stating success rates in a drug and alcohol rehabilitation centre, since there
is no way to give a truly honest answer to the question. The reasons for this
are many.
1) How do you define success? A
client is clean or sober for one year, five years, or their lifetime? How could
anyone possibly know the answer to this question without daily drug testing for
the rest of a person’s life?
2) Many of the clients that come
to Channah Thailand come for the anonymity that we guarantee. Some are high
profile clients or work in safety critical positions and do not want us to ever
contact them again after they leave to be sure that their drug or alcohol
rehabilitation stays a private affair.
3) We develop a very close
relationship with our clients, many of them do not want to let us down, so we
can never know for sure if they are telling the truth if we do follow up with
them after they have left.
4) Our clients come from many
different countries around the world; it would be a phenomenally difficult and
extremely expensive exercise to try and verify that they are still clean or
sober.
5)
When doing follow ups only a percentage of clients will respond. Therefore this
will make any assessment skewed. This means that when a centre offers a success
rate what they are saying is: Of the zzz people contacted xxx responded. Of
those responses yyy said that they are still abstinent. Note the word said. So
any success rate mentioned is only a percentage of the people who responded. And
then there is no way of telling whether they have told the truth. So, for
example if you asked 100 people and 60 respond. Of the 60 responses 30 said that
they are abstinent you could say that you have a 50% success rate. However the
truth is that you have a 30% success rate based on the respondee's reply. The
bottom line is that it is meaningless.
6) If a client comes to a centre
with the goal of reducing their drinking to a level they can control, would they
be considered a success?
I know of one centre in
particular that states a very high success rate. Technically their numbers
might be accurate by the scale and parameters they use, however if a client is
admitted to them for using crack cocaine and a year later when they follow up
with the client he or she is no longer using crack but has switched to heroin,
this is considered success to them. I am sorry, but switching from one drug to
another, to me is not success. It may be harm reduction if a client switched
from heroin to methadone and some people might consider this a level of
success.
Also most centres that state
success rates usually only follow up with the person for six months to one year,
if after that year the person has relapsed it does not go against the centres
statistics.
The only 100% definitive number
I can give anyone is that we have a 92% course completion rate. That is, if a
client books for 28 days they stay for the full term of their treatment.
Compare this to the average centre in the UK that runs anywhere between 30 to
50%.
We have managed this by being in
a remote and luxurious location with no access to drugs or alcohol, treating
each client with respect, and tailoring an individualized programme to the
client instead of forcing the client to fit into predefined programme. By being
a client centered and evidence based programme people realize very quickly that
we can help them.
I know from my contact with our
clients that do keep in touch with us, that many, if not most, are doing very
well. They made the life changes that were required and try to adhere to the
plan we helped them to develop.
Our therapists have more then
140 years combined experience working with drug and alcohol clients. We know
what we are doing, if you give us 100% we will do everything we possibly can to
be sure you not only live a drug or alcohol free life, but attain your goals of
living a happy substance free life.
When looking for a drug and
alcohol rehabilitation centre I would suggest if they state a success rate you
ask them how they came up with that number? What do they consider success? What
are the questions they ask when interviewing past clients? How long do they
follow up? Then also analyze their answers. Most of these numbers will be
misleading at best and out right fraudulent at the worst.
The only possible way to ever
have a truly accurate success rate would be every client that enters a centre
would have to agree to a lifetime of regular drug tests. Only then could you
give a definitive answer to success rate. In reality this could never happen.
I will leave you with one small
example and this is in no way anything against AA. It is just a question I would
ask after reading the statement below.
In 1992, a random survey of
6,500 A.A. members in both the United States and Canada revealed that 35 percent
were sober for more than five years; 34 percent were sober from between one and
five years; and 31 percent were sober for less than one year. The average time
of sobriety of members is more than five years. According to A.A. World
services, the survey is designed to provide information to the professional
community and the general public as part of its purpose to carry the message of
recovery to those who still suffer from alcoholism.
So it seems like they have
approximately a 32 to 34% success rate. Which may be true, however you need to
read very closely. They surveyed “6,500 A.A. members and The
average time of sobriety of members is more than five years.” How were
these members picked? Who picked them? Random can mean so many things but it
does not necessarily mean random.
The 32 to 34% success rate is
only for the people that remained members of A.A. what happens to the numbers if
you add all the people in that left the programme?
A.A. by it very nature should
never post success rates since it is totally impossible for them to ever even
guess at it. Alcoholics Anonymous, the name says it all, how could you
possibly do any kind of scientific survey when the people you are surveying are
anonymous?
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