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Nursing & Care Open Access Journal

Short Communication Volume 4 Issue 2

Effect of specific nursing intervention programme on relapse prevention of clients with alcohol dependence syndrome

Indra Selvam,1 Suma Jose2

1Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Hail, Saudi Arabia
2Department of Nursing, Saveetha University, India

Correspondence: Indra Selvam, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Hail, Saudi Arabia, Tel 8870 0458 27

Received: September 23, 2017 | Published: October 20, 2017

Citation: Selvam I, Jose S. Effect of specific nursing intervention programme on relapse prevention of clients with alcohol dependence syndrome. Nurse Care Open Acces J. 2017;4(2):369-371. DOI: 10.15406/ncoaj.2017.04.00099

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Abstract

Alcohol consumption and problems related to alcohol vary widely around the world, but the burden of disease and death remains significant in most countries. The highest amount of alcohol consumed per adult resident is in Europe, especially in Russia and its surrounding countries, and in the established market economies of Western Europe and North America. The least amount of alcohol consumed per resident is in the mostly Islamic regions of the Eastern Mediterranean. Between these two areas, the difference in consumption is more than 20- fold. The investigator had a chance to interact with alcohol dependent clients during clinical experience in De addiction ward. An interest to bring these clients and family back to normal life made the investigator to find out the effect of specific nursing intervention programme on relapse prevention of clients with alcohol dependence syndrome.

Keywords: alcohol dependence syndrome, nursing intervention, relapse prevention

Introduction

Alcoholism is an illness marked by drinking alcoholic beverages at a level that interferes with physical health, mental health, social, family and occupational responsibilities. It is a complex problem having medical and social ramifications which impact all social strata. It affects not only the users and their families, but all sectors of the society. Controlling alcoholism by way of improving motivation has been a matter of priority by the time. The motivation of client is a critical issue for treatment and changing their drinking behavior.1 Only 15% of with alcohol dependence seek treatment for the disease. Relapse after treatment is common, so it is important to maintain support system in order to cope and assure that they do not turn to complete reversals2 observed that in accordance with the growing consumption of alcohol all over the country, the hospital admission rates due to adverse effects of alcohol consumption are also increasing.3 Estimating the burden due to alcohol use considered it as the major one among other communicable diseases. In de- addiction centers, almost 95% of these people are brought by family members. Since they do not accept alcoholism is a major problem and do not have motivation relapse rate is more.4

The investigator had a chance to interact with alcohol dependent clients during clinical experience in De addiction ward. Many patients enter treatment under pressure from family members. Although these patients may attend treatment, they may not be ready to change their drinking behavior and may not actively participate in treatment. Most of them did not have motivation and had little awareness about the disease of alcoholism, its deleterious effects, need for abstinence and drink refusal skills. They expressed their concerns, conflicts and difficulty to maintain abstinence. Support from significant ones also is a crucial aspect in relapse prevention.5,6 Together with these observations, an interest to bring these clients and family back to normal life made the investigator to find out the effect of specific nursing intervention programme on relapse prevention of clients with alcohol dependence syndrome.

Objectives

  1. Assess the motivation of clients with alcohol dependence syndrome.
  2. Assess the warning signs of relapse among clients with alcohol dependence syndrome.
  3. Determine the effect of specific nursing intervention programme on relapse prevention of clients with alcohol dependence syndrome.
  4. Find the correlation between motivation and warning signs of relapse among clients with alcohol dependence syndrome.
  5. Find the association between motivation and selected variables of clients with alcohol dependence syndrome.
  6. Find the association between warning signs of relapse and selected variables of clients with alcohol dependence syndrome.

Hypotheses

  1. H1: There is a significant difference in mean pre test and post test scores of motivation in clients with alcohol dependence syndrome in experimental group
  2. H2: There is a significant difference in mean pre test and post test scores of warning signs of relapse in clients with alcohol dependence syndrome in experimental group
  3. H3: There is a significant difference in mean post test score of motivation in experimental and control group.
  4. H4: There is a significant difference in mean post test score of warning signs of relapse in experimental and control group.
  5. H5: There is a significant correlation between scores of motivation and warning signs of relapse in experimental and control group.
  6. H6: There is significant association between motivation and selected variables of clients with alcohol dependence syndrome.
  7. H7: There is significant association between warning signs of relapse and selected variables of clients with alcohol dependence syndrome.

Research design

Quasi-experimental-Time series nonequivalent control group design.

Control group                       O1      O2      O3       O4

Experimental group                O5      X      O6      O7      O8

  1. O1-Pretest score in control group using demographic and clinical data sheet, SOCRATES 8A for assessing motivation, AWARE questionnaire and clinical profile blood investigation chart for assessing relapse.
  2. O2- First post test score in control group using SOCRATES 8A and AWARE questionnaire on 20th day of pretest.
  3. O3- Second post test score in control group SOCRATES 8A and AWARE questionnaire on 50th day of pretest.
  4. O4- Third post test score in control group SOCRATES 8A and AWARE questionnaire and clinical profile blood investigation chart on 140th day of pretest
  5. X - Specific nursing intervention programme for experimental group from 2nd to 13th day of pretest O5-Pretest score in experimental group using demographic and clinical data sheet, SOCRATES 8A for assessing motivation, AWARE questionnaire and clinical profile blood investigation chart for assessing relapse.
  6. O6- First post test score in experimental group using SOCRATES 8A and AWARE questionnaire on 20th day of pretest (1 week after intervention).
  7. O7- Second post test score in experimental group SOCRATES 8A and AWARE questionnaire on 50th day of pretest (1 month after intervention).
  8. O8 -Third post test score in experimental l group SOCRATES 8A and AWARE questionnaire and clinical profile blood investigation chart on 140th day of pretest (3 month after intervention).

Setting

General Hospital, Ernakulam

Population

Clients admitted in General Hospital, Ernakulam who satisfy ICD10 criteria for alcohol dependence syndrome

Sample

60 clients admitted in General Hospital, Ernakulam who satisfy ICD-10 criteria for alcohol dependence syndrome. Average-60 clients, 30 for experimental and 30 for control group.

Sampling technique

Non probability-Purposive sampling.

Criteria for sample selection

Inclusion criteria: Male clients,

  1. who are willing to participate
  2. who understand Malayalam
  3. in the age group of 30-60years

Exclusion criteria

Male clients,

  1. with major psychiatric illness
  2. with poly substance abuse except smoking
  3. with debilitating medical illness

Tool and Technique

  1. Tool 1: Part A: Demographic data sheet
  2. Part B: Clinical data sheet related to alcoholism
  3. Tool 2: Standardized tool for assessing motivation, SOCRATES V8 (19 item scale)
  4. Tool 3: AWARE Questionnaire (28 item scale)
  5. Tool 4: Clinical profile- Blood investigation chart

Tool 1

  1. Part A It includes 8 items: age, education, occupation, marital status, religion, monthly income, type of family, place of residence
  2. Part B It includes 8 items: duration of drinking habit, duration of excessive intake, daily money spent, maximal period of abstinence, family history, history of attempted suicide, family history of mental illness, history of smoking.

Tool 2

SOCRATES V8 (Stages of change readiness and treatment eagerness scale) is an experimental instrument designed to assess readiness for change in alcohol abusers. The instrument yields three factorially-derived scale scores: Recognition (Re), Ambivalence (Am), and Taking Steps (Ts).

Tool 3

AWARE Questionnaire (advance warning of elapse) is a self reported 7 point rating scale with 28 items. The higher the score, the more warning sign of relapse are reported by the client.

Tool 4

Clinical profile- Blood investigation chart includes the value of Gamma Glutamyl Transferase (GGT), which is a biomarker for diagnosing alcohol abuse.

Technique

Tool 1 by interview, tool 2 & 3 by questionnaire, and tool 4 by means of biological method.

Plan for data collection

After getting permission from Institutional Review Board/ethical committee, investigator has to identify and select clients who satisfy the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Initially build rapport with the client, and explain the purpose of the study. After obtaining the consent from the client to participate in the study, the data would be collected using interview schedule. Planning to collect data from 60 clients of which 30 is experimental group and 30 in control group. Data from the control group were collected first. The responses were recorded by the investigator herself. Background information, motivation and warning signs of relapse would be assessed by using proforma for demographic and clinical data sheet, SOCRATES 8A personnel questionnaire, AWARE questionnaire and clinical profile blood investigation chart.

After the pre test, the experimental group would be given specific nursing intervention programme on second to 13th day. The client’s belonged to experimental groups were selected as five batches of six subjects. The intervention programme for the experimental group would be started on the 2nd day of pretest with a session of motivational interviewing and the second session would be given 4th day. Group therapy start on the 3rd day of pre test and will continue thrice weekly on alternate days for two weeks as per plan without interrupting the routine functions of the ward. Risk- reward analysis would be conducted on the sixth day, ad family psycho-education on 8th and 12th day. First post test would conduct one week after the intervention, on 20th day and second post test on 50th day, one month after intervention. After 3 months of intervention, on 140th day, third post test would be conducted.

Plan for data analysis

The data would be analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics. Frequency distribution and percentage will be used to analyze the demographic and personal data of clients with alcohol dependence syndrome. Chi square test was used to find out the homogeneity between experimental and control group. Motivation and relapse score would be assessed by mean and standard deviation. The effect of specific nursing intervention programme on relapse prevention in clients with alcohol dependence would be analyzed by repeated measures ANOVA and post-hoc test. The pretest and post test scores of clinical profile blood investigation chart will be analyzed by paired t test, which verifies the effect of intervention. The correlation between motivation and relapse will be analyzed by Pearson correlation coefficient. One-way ANOVA was used to find out association of motivation and relapse with selected demographic variables of clients with alcohol dependence syndrome.

Outcome of the study

The study aimed to determine the effects of specific nursing intervention programme on relapse of clients with alcohol dependence syndrome. At the end of the study, based upon the effectiveness specific nursing intervention programme could be implemented in the management of clients with alcohol dependence syndrome which will improve motivation and prevent relapse.

Ethical consideration

The probable ethical issue in the study includes willingness of clients to participate in this study. The study would be based on the guideline that the health of my subject is my first consideration. Privacy and confidentiality of the opinion of the subjects would be maintained. Written informed consent would be obtained from the client for participating in this study. Vulnerable subjects are excluded. Control group would be getting all the routine intervention, and will get specific nursing intervention after post test.

Acknowledgements

None.

Conflict of interest

The author declares no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Benegal V, Gururaj G, Murthy P. Report on a WHO Collaborative project on unrecorded consumption of Alcohol in Karnataka. India: Springer; 2003.
  2. Gururaj G, Isaac MK. Psychiatric epidemiology in India: Moving beyond numbers In: Agarwal SP, editors. Mental health an Indian perspective -1946-2003. Ministry of health and family welfare, New Delhi, India: Springer; 2004. p. 37–61.
  3. Korlakunta, Chary Reddy. APJ Psychological Medicine. 2012;13(2).
  4. Miller WR, Hester RK. The effectiveness of alcoholism treatment methods: what research reveals. In: Miller WR, Heather editors. Treating addictive behaviors, process of change. New York, USA: Plenum Press; 1986. p. 121–74.
  5. Polit DF, Beck CT. Nursing research-generating and assessing for nursing practice. 8th ed. USA: Lippincott Williams, Wilkims; 2008.
  6. Tempesta E, Janiri L, Bignamini A, Acamprosate and relapse prevention in the treatment of alcohol dependence: A placebo-controlled study. Alcohol & Alcoholism. 2000;35(2):202–209.
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©2017 Selvam, et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and build upon your work non-commercially.