Social service offices as a point of entry into substance abuse treatment for poor South Africans

Background: In South Africa, district social service offices are often the first point of entry into the substance abuse treatment system. Despite this, little is known about the profile of people presenting with substance-related problems at these service points. This has a negative impact on treat...

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Main Authors: Burnhams, N.H., Dada, S., Myers-Franchi, Bronwyn
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/85727
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author Burnhams, N.H.
Dada, S.
Myers-Franchi, Bronwyn
author_facet Burnhams, N.H.
Dada, S.
Myers-Franchi, Bronwyn
author_sort Burnhams, N.H.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Background: In South Africa, district social service offices are often the first point of entry into the substance abuse treatment system. Despite this, little is known about the profile of people presenting with substance-related problems at these service points. This has a negative impact on treatment service planning. This paper begins to redress this gap through describing patterns of substance use and service needs among people using general social services in the Western Cape and comparing findings against the profile of persons attending specialist substance abuse treatment facilities in the region. Methods: As part of a standard client information system, an electronic questionnaire was completed for each person seeking social assistance. Data on socio-demographic characteristics, the range of presenting problems, patterns of substance use, perceived consequences of substance use, as well as types of services provided were analysed for the 691 social welfare clients who reported substance use between 2007 and 2009. These data were compared against clients attending substance abuse treatment centres during the same time period. Results: Findings indicate that social services offices are used as a way of accessing specialist services but are also used as a service point, especially by groups under-represented in the specialist treatment sector. Women, people from rural communities and people with alcohol-related problems are more likely to seek assistance at social service offices providing low threshold intervention services than from the specialist treatment sector. Conclusions: The study provides evidence that social services are a point of entry and intervention for people from underserved communities in the Western Cape. If these low-threshold services can be supported to provide good quality services, they may be an effective and efficient way of improving access to treatment in a context of limited service availability. © 2012 Harker Burnhams et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-857272021-10-06T06:56:35Z Social service offices as a point of entry into substance abuse treatment for poor South Africans Burnhams, N.H. Dada, S. Myers-Franchi, Bronwyn Science & Technology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Substance Abuse Substance abuse Epidemiology South Africa Social services CAPE-TOWN DISADVANTAGED COMMUNITIES LIFETIME PREVALENCE BARRIERS ALCOHOL Background: In South Africa, district social service offices are often the first point of entry into the substance abuse treatment system. Despite this, little is known about the profile of people presenting with substance-related problems at these service points. This has a negative impact on treatment service planning. This paper begins to redress this gap through describing patterns of substance use and service needs among people using general social services in the Western Cape and comparing findings against the profile of persons attending specialist substance abuse treatment facilities in the region. Methods: As part of a standard client information system, an electronic questionnaire was completed for each person seeking social assistance. Data on socio-demographic characteristics, the range of presenting problems, patterns of substance use, perceived consequences of substance use, as well as types of services provided were analysed for the 691 social welfare clients who reported substance use between 2007 and 2009. These data were compared against clients attending substance abuse treatment centres during the same time period. Results: Findings indicate that social services offices are used as a way of accessing specialist services but are also used as a service point, especially by groups under-represented in the specialist treatment sector. Women, people from rural communities and people with alcohol-related problems are more likely to seek assistance at social service offices providing low threshold intervention services than from the specialist treatment sector. Conclusions: The study provides evidence that social services are a point of entry and intervention for people from underserved communities in the Western Cape. If these low-threshold services can be supported to provide good quality services, they may be an effective and efficient way of improving access to treatment in a context of limited service availability. © 2012 Harker Burnhams et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. 2012 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/85727 10.1186/1747-597X-7-22 English http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 BMC fulltext
spellingShingle Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Substance Abuse
Substance abuse
Epidemiology
South Africa
Social services
CAPE-TOWN
DISADVANTAGED COMMUNITIES
LIFETIME PREVALENCE
BARRIERS
ALCOHOL
Burnhams, N.H.
Dada, S.
Myers-Franchi, Bronwyn
Social service offices as a point of entry into substance abuse treatment for poor South Africans
title Social service offices as a point of entry into substance abuse treatment for poor South Africans
title_full Social service offices as a point of entry into substance abuse treatment for poor South Africans
title_fullStr Social service offices as a point of entry into substance abuse treatment for poor South Africans
title_full_unstemmed Social service offices as a point of entry into substance abuse treatment for poor South Africans
title_short Social service offices as a point of entry into substance abuse treatment for poor South Africans
title_sort social service offices as a point of entry into substance abuse treatment for poor south africans
topic Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Substance Abuse
Substance abuse
Epidemiology
South Africa
Social services
CAPE-TOWN
DISADVANTAGED COMMUNITIES
LIFETIME PREVALENCE
BARRIERS
ALCOHOL
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/85727