A Longitudinal Assessment of Substance Use Treatment during the COVID-19 Pandemic Using Staff and Service Data

Author:

Carlyle Molly1ORCID,Newland Grace1ORCID,Morris Leith1,Ellem Rhiannon1,Tisdale Calvert1,Quinn Catherine A.1,Hides Leanne1

Affiliation:

1. Lives Lived Well Research Group, National Centre for Youth Substance Use Research, School of Psychology, Faculty of Health and Behavioural Sciences, University of Queensland, Brisbane 4072, Australia

Abstract

Introduction: Alcohol and other drug (AOD) treatment services were required to rapidly adapt delivery of care in response to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. This study examined longitudinal changes in the delivery of AOD counselling in Australia over 21 months (October 2019–July 2021) before and throughout the pandemic, using both staff self-report and service data. Methods: Treatment staff from a large AOD service in Queensland, Australia provided self-report data on time spent delivering counselling via face-to-face, outreach (home visits), telephone, and virtual (video) formats. Two waves of online questionnaires were collected, with staff reporting on their time before the pandemic (retrospectively for October 2019–February 2020); during the first lockdown period (retrospectively for March–May 2020); when restrictions were initially eased (June–September 2020); and one year later (July 2021). Service records of the number of counselling episodes conducted by each treatment modality were extracted between October 2019 and July 2021, and analysed by month. Results: Staff (n = 117) and service records indicated an increase in telephone-delivered AOD counselling during the first lockdown, alongside an increase in total counselling records. Telephone-delivered counselling was still significantly higher one year later. Face-to-face counselling declined after the onset of the pandemic, but increased quickly when restrictions were eased. Outreach counselling decreased during the first lockdown. Virtual counselling remained negligible throughout. Conclusion: AOD treatment services quickly utilised telephone counselling options at the start of the pandemic, and demonstrated continued utilisation of this method one year later. Increased virtual (video) counselling was not observed and may be due to limited infrastructure, staff training, and clients lacking Internet connectivity or technology required.

Funder

Australian Government Department of Health awarded to the National Centre for Youth Substance Use Research

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Engineering

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