Involuntary discharge from drug or alcohol treatment programs in Vancouver, Canada
Kat Gallant, Kanna Hayashi, JinCheol Choi, M-J Milloy, Thomas Kerr

TL;DR
This study examines why some people are involuntarily discharged from drug or alcohol treatment in Vancouver, finding that homelessness and heavy drug use are key factors.
Contribution
The study identifies specific risk factors for involuntary discharge from treatment due to ongoing substance use.
Findings
Involuntary discharge occurred in 2.8% of participants due to ongoing substance use.
Homelessness and daily injection drug use were strongly associated with involuntary discharge.
Most discharges occurred from in-patient centers and recovery houses for heroin or meth use.
Abstract
Retention in substance use treatment is essential to treatment success. While programmatic factors are known to influence retention, less is known about the role of involuntary discharges from drug or alcohol treatment programs. Therefore, we sought to identify the prevalence of and factors associated with involuntary discharge due to ongoing substance use. Data were derived from two community-recruited prospective cohort studies of people who use drugs in Vancouver, Canada. Generalized estimating equation (GEE) analyses were used to identify variables associated with involuntary discharge from treatment programs due to ongoing substance use. Between June 2017 and March 2020, 1487 participants who accessed substance use treatment and completed at least one study interview were included in this study. Involuntary discharge from a treatment program due to ongoing substance use was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHomelessness and Social Issues · HIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk · Substance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes
