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Dive into the research topics where Christina M. Andrews is active.

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Featured researches published by Christina M. Andrews.


Journal of The Society for Social Work and Research | 2012

Client-Provider Relationship and Treatment Outcome: A Systematic Review of Substance Abuse, Child Welfare, and Mental Health Services Research

Jeanne C. Marsh; Beth Angell; Christina M. Andrews; Ashley Curry

This systematic review reports on the association of the client-provider relationship with service outcomes across 3 service sectors: substance abuse, child welfare, and mental health. The review includes 60 research reports meeting inclusion criteria: 25 in substance abuse, 7 in child welfare, and 28 in mental health. For each social service sector, we analyze the association of the client-provider relationship to intermediate and ultimate outcomes. In addition, we examine potential moderating mechanisms of rater type (i.e., client, provider, and observer) and treatment setting (i.e., inpatient, outpatient, other). Social services research increasingly seeks to identify the active elements that affect outcomes common to all interventions. Results suggest the client-provider relationship is a consistent predictor of client retention in treatment and a somewhat less-consistent predictor of ultimate outcome across the 3 service sectors. These results contrast with recent findings from the psychotherapeutic literature in which the client-provider relationship demonstrated a weaker association with treatment retention (measured as drop out) than with other outcome measures. Findings indicate a clear need to refine the conceptualization and measurement of key service mechanisms and outcomes, particularly in the area of child welfare given that services research is less developed in that sector. The discussion includes recommendations for future research, including the use of selection criteria to enable researchers to conduct formal meta-analyses and expand the moderational framework with additional moderator variables relevant to social service delivery.


Health Affairs | 2015

Despite Resources From The ACA, Most States Do Little To Help Addiction Treatment Programs Implement Health Care Reform

Christina M. Andrews; Amanda J. Abraham; Colleen M. Grogan; Harold A. Pollack; Clifford S. Bersamira; Keith Humphreys; Peter D. Friedmann

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) dramatically expands health insurance for addiction treatment and provides unprecedented opportunities for service growth and delivery model reform. Yet most addiction treatment programs lack the staffing and technological capabilities to respond successfully to ACA-driven system change. In light of these challenges, we conducted a national survey to examine how Single State Agencies for addiction treatment--the state governmental organizations charged with overseeing addiction treatment programs--are helping programs respond to new requirements under the ACA. We found that most Single State Agencies provide little assistance to addiction treatment programs. Most agencies are helping programs develop collaborations with other health service programs. However, fewer than half reported providing help in modernizing systems to support insurance participation, and only one in three provided assistance with enrollment outreach. In the absence of technical assistance, it is unlikely that addiction treatment programs will fully realize the ACAs promise to improve access to and quality of addiction treatment.


Medical Care Research and Review | 2014

Adoption of evidence-based clinical innovations: the case of buprenorphine use by opioid treatment programs.

Christina M. Andrews; Thomas D'Aunno; Harold A. Pollack; Peter D. Friedmann

This article examines changes from 2005 to 2011 in the use of an evidence-based clinical innovation, buprenorphine use, among a nationally representative sample of opioid treatment programs and identifies characteristics associated with its adoption. We apply a model of the adoption of clinical innovations that focuses on the work needs and characteristics of staff; organizations’ technical and social support for the innovation; local market dynamics and competition; and state policies governing the innovation. Results indicate that buprenorphine use increased 24% for detoxification and 47% for maintenance therapy between 2005 and 2011. Buprenorphine use was positively related to reliance on private insurance and availability of state subsidies to cover its cost and inversely related to the percentage of clients who injected opiates, county size, and local availability of methadone. The results indicate that financial incentives and market factors play important roles in opioid treatment programs’ decisions to adopt evidence-based clinical innovations such as buprenorphine use.


Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment | 2014

Gender disparities in utilization and outcome of comprehensive substance abuse treatment among racial/ethnic groups.

Erick G. Guerrero; Jeanne C. Marsh; Dingcai Cao; Hee Choon Shin; Christina M. Andrews

This study examined gender differences within Black, Latino, and White subgroups in the utilization of comprehensive services and their relation to posttreatment substance use. Survey data were collected during the National Treatment Improvement Evaluation Study (NTIES), a prospective, longitudinal, multisite study of substance abuse treatment programs and their clients in the United States. The analytic sample consisted of 1,812 blacks (734 women and 1,078 men), 486 Latinos (147 women and 339 men), and 844 whites (147 women and 339 men) from 59 service delivery organizations. Results related to service utilization indicated that compared to men, women in all racial and ethnic groups needed and received more services targeted to their needs and reported more positive relations with service providers. Gender was a significant moderator of the relationship between service receipt and treatment outcomes for all racial and ethnic groups, but especially for the Latino subsample. Findings point to the need to consider race-specific gender differences in the development of culturally competent, comprehensive substance abuse treatment.


Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research | 2014

The Relationship of State Medicaid Coverage to Medicaid Acceptance Among Substance Abuse Providers in the United States

Christina M. Andrews

The Affordable Care Act will dramatically increase the number of Americans with Medicaid coverage for substance abuse treatment (SAT). Currently, few SAT providers accept Medicaid, and consequently, there is concern that newly-eligible Medicaid enrollees will have difficulty finding SAT providers willing to serve them. However, little is known about why few SAT providers accept Medicaid. In response, this study examines how features of state Medicaid coverage for SAT, including benefits, eligibility, and oversight, are associated with Medicaid acceptance among SAT providers. Medicaid acceptance was positively associated with the number of SAT services covered, and the number of optional categorical expansions implemented by the state. Requirements for physician involvement were associated with lower odds of acceptance. The results suggest that more generous Medicaid coverage may encourage SAT providers to accept Medicaid, but regulatory policies may inhibit their ability to do so.


Health Affairs | 2015

Lessons From Medicaid’s Divergent Paths On Mental Health And Addiction Services

Christina M. Andrews; Colleen M. Grogan; Marianne Brennan; Harold A. Pollack

Over the past fifty years Medicaid has taken divergent paths in financing mental health and addiction treatment. In mental health, Medicaid became the dominant source of funding and had a profound impact on the organization and delivery of services. But it played a much more modest role in addiction treatment. This is poised to change, as the Affordable Care Act is expected to dramatically expand Medicaids role in financing addiction services. In this article we consider the different paths these two treatment systems have taken since 1965 and identify strategic lessons that the addiction treatment system might take from mental healths experience under Medicaid. These lessons include leveraging optional coverage categories to tailor Medicaid to the unique needs of the addiction treatment system, providing incentives to addiction treatment programs to create and deliver high-quality alternatives to inpatient treatment, and using targeted Medicaid licensure standards to increase the quality of addiction services.


Violence Against Women | 2011

The Impact of Comprehensive Services in Substance Abuse Treatment for Women With a History of Intimate Partner Violence

Christina M. Andrews; Dingcai Cao; Jeanne C. Marsh; Hee-Choon Shin

This study examines the impact of comprehensive services on posttreatment substance use among women with a history of intimate partner violence. The sample includes 1,123 women from 50 treatment facilities derived from the National Treatment Improvement Evaluation Study (NTIES). Generalized linear mixed modeling was used to determine whether a history of intimate partner violence moderates the association between service receipt and posttreatment substance use. Significant interactions were found between history of intimate partner violence and concrete ( p = .016) and family services (p = .023) in predicting substance use.


American Journal of Public Health | 2017

The Affordable Care Act Transformation of Substance Use Disorder Treatment

Amanda J. Abraham; Christina M. Andrews; Colleen M. Grogan; Thomas D’Aunno; Keith Humphreys; Harold A. Pollack; Peter D. Friedmann

The authors reflect on changes involving substance use disorder (SUD) treatment under the U.S. Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), and it mentions American President Barack Obamas public health legacy, as well as the potential impact that the ACA will have on an opioid epidemic in the country. Medications for opioid use disorder patients are examined, along with health insurance coverage for SUD treatment services and the U.S. 2008 Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act.


Journal of Gay and Lesbian Social Services | 2012

Social and Health Service Use and Treatment Outcomes for Sexual Minorities in a National Sample of Substance Abuse Treatment Programs

Melissa Hardesty; Dingcai Cao; Hee Choon Shin; Christina M. Andrews; Jeanne C. Marsh

This study examines substance use severity, levels of social and health service utilization, and the impact of service utilization on treatment outcomes for sexual minorities versus non-minorities. The sample included 3,094 clients from the National Treatment Improvement Evaluation Study (NTIES). Substance use severity among sexual minorities and non-sexual minorities was similar at treatment entry and at 12 months post-discharge. Differences in social and health service utilization were significant for substance abuse counseling and health services. Significant interactions between sexuality and access services and sexuality and mental health services were also found. Practice and research implications are discussed.


Journal of Gerontological Social Work | 2008

An Exploratory Study of Substance Abuse Among Latino Older Adults

Christina M. Andrews

ABSTRACT Substance abuse among older adults is on the rise. Of particular concern is the increase in alcohol and drug use predicted among Latino elders, expected to result from an upsurge in the Latino population and concurrent growth in the number of older adults. Providing effective treatment for this group will require age-specific, culturally competent interventions. However, few studies have focused on geriatric substance abuse among Latinos. This study aims to lay the groundwork for further research by examining perceptions of the problem among treatment providers and researchers in aging and substance abuse. Implications for social work research and practice are addressed.

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Erick G. Guerrero

University of Southern California

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Dingcai Cao

University of Illinois at Chicago

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