Portraying alcohol treatment outcomes: Different yardsticks of success
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Analyzing Therapeutic Change Using Modified Brinley Plots: History, Construction, and Interpretation
2017, Behavior TherapyCitation Excerpt :Modified Brinley plots are first and foremost a within-subject data analysis tool, but that does not prevent them from being used to compare change over time in different groups. In Jacobson et al. (1984) and Sobell et al. (1995), data from different therapy groups are displayed within the one graph, with the groups differentiated by symbols. While this can work with a small number of participants it does risk making the graphs too complex for easy visual analysis (Tufte, 2001).
Efficacy of automated telephone continuing care following outpatient therapy for alcohol dependence
2015, Addictive BehaviorsPatient predictors of alcohol treatment outcome: A systematic review
2009, Journal of Substance Abuse TreatmentCitation Excerpt :While most of the studies reviewed here examined prediction using multivariate analysis, not all reported on the combined predictive power of the models developed. For those that do, the total percentage of variance accounted for varies widely from a nonsignificant R2 = .03 in predicting drinks per day (Donovan, Kivlahan, & Walker, 1984) to R2 = .62 in predicting DDD (Sobell, Sobell, & Gavin, 1995), with a mean R2 = .30. All R2 values for drinking-related outcomes reported in the reviewed papers were entered into SPSS version 13.0.
Using the Timeline Followback to determine time windows representative of annual alcohol consumption with problem drinkers
2008, Addictive BehaviorsCitation Excerpt :Participants reported drinking on a mean (SD) of 5.4 (1.7) days per week and consuming a mean (SD) of 5.9 (2.8) drinks on days when they drank in the year preceding the intervention (Sobell et al., 2002). Thus, although the current participants had never been in treatment, they reported significant alcohol problems similar to participants in studies of brief interventions (Bien, Miller, & Tonigan, 1993; Heather, 1994; Sobell, Sobell, & Gavin, 1995; Sobell, Sobell, & Leo, 2000). The TLFB (Sobell & Sobell, 1992, 2003) was used to evaluate the representativeness of different time windows for describing annual drinking data.
Alcoholism treatment outcome studies, 1970-1998: An expanded look at the nature of the research
2003, Addictive Behaviors