2024
M135 Counselor Terminological Preferences for "Craving,” “Euphoria,” and “Withdrawal” Among Patients Receiving Methadone Treatment
Gazzola M, Beitel M, Buck K, Cammack K, Saeed G, Eggert K, Roehrich T, Madden L, Barry D. M135 Counselor Terminological Preferences for "Craving,” “Euphoria,” and “Withdrawal” Among Patients Receiving Methadone Treatment. Drug And Alcohol Dependence 2024, 260: 110415. DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2023.110415.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchS94 Patient Perspectives on an Open Access Model for Methadone Treatment: A Research and Process Improvement Protocol
Madden L, Farnum S, Eggert K, Cannata E, Hermes G, DiMeola K, Hoffman K, Barry D. S94 Patient Perspectives on an Open Access Model for Methadone Treatment: A Research and Process Improvement Protocol. Drug And Alcohol Dependence 2024, 260: 110205. DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2023.110205.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchA Quantitative Examination of Illness Models Among People With Opioid Use Disorder Receiving Methadone Treatment
Gazzola M, Carmichael I, Thompson E, Beitel M, Madden L, Saeed G, Hoffman K, Hammouri M, Hsaio C, Barry D. A Quantitative Examination of Illness Models Among People With Opioid Use Disorder Receiving Methadone Treatment. Journal Of Addiction Medicine 2024, 18: 262-268. PMID: 38446859, DOI: 10.1097/adm.0000000000001282.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchBrain disease modelMethadone treatmentTreatment beliefsIllness modelAssociated with beliefsOpioid use disorderUse disorderOutpatient opioid treatment programAddiction modelTreatment programsOpioid treatment programsAddictionMethadoneMultivariate analysisScale agreementIllnessDisordersCounselingBrainBeliefsDisease modelsOpioidPatientsStatistical significanceMultivariate regression
2017
Why People Who Inject Drugs Voluntarily Transition Off Methadone in Ukraine
Rozanova J, Marcus R, Taxman FS, Bojko MJ, Madden L, Farnum SO, Mazhnaya A, Dvoriak S, Altice FL. Why People Who Inject Drugs Voluntarily Transition Off Methadone in Ukraine. Qualitative Health Research 2017, 27: 2057-2070. PMID: 28942704, DOI: 10.1177/1049732317732307.Peer-Reviewed Original Research