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Substance Use Outcomes Among Sexual and Gender Minority Individuals Living with HIV Following Residential Substance Use Treatment in Washington, DC.

Jennifer M BelusHannah TralkaEmily N SatinskyC J Seitz-BrownStacey B DaughtersJessica F Magidson
Published in: Alcoholism treatment quarterly (2023)
This study explored how sexual or gender minority (SGM) status influenced substance use (SU) treatment outcomes in a predominantly African American and unemployed sample of people with HIV. N = 60 participants were enrolled in an abstinence-focused inpatient SU treatment center, followed by outpatient treatment sessions. At 12-months follow-up, the survival rate (i.e. those who did not reuse substances) was 37.6% (non-SGM group) vs. 4.8% (SGM group). The impact of SGM status on reuse was .54 log odds, p = .11, which translates to a 71.8% increase in the hazard of reusing substances for SGM vs. non-SGM individuals. For both groups, frequency of reuse remained stable and problems associated with SU decreased over time. Results suggest a potentially clinically relevant finding that SGM individuals have possible heigh-tened risk of SU after a mixed inpatient-outpatient program. ClinicalTrials.gov trial registration number: NCT01351454.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • african american
  • clinical trial
  • randomized controlled trial
  • immune response
  • hiv positive
  • quality improvement
  • hiv testing
  • men who have sex with men
  • free survival
  • double blind