Drug-using patients with PTSD improved with treatment, but dropped out of therapy more often and showed less improvement in symptoms, data also shows
Letting people with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) choose between treatment methods improves their quality of life and reduces the disorder’s symptoms, according to new research from Case Western Reserve University. The same data also showed that patients with PTSD using marijuana or other drugs saw poorer outcomes from treatment, mainly because they dropped out of treatment programs—potentially prolonging their cycle of PTSD and substance use.
- Patients who use or have a long history of using marijuana were almost twice as likely to drop out of both treatments;
- Patients with a history of marijuana-use disorder were more likely see less improvement of their symptoms;
- Of the two treatments, exposure therapy results in better health-related outcomes than setraline, especially in patients who prefer exposure; and
- Patients with recent marijuana use and other drug-use showed less adherence to exposure therapy, but not to sertraline.
For more information, contact Daniel Robison at daniel.robison@case.edu.