1998
DOI: 10.1046/j.1360-0443.1998.9312185711.x
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The Maudsley Addiction Profile (MAP): a brief instrument for assessing treatment outcome

Abstract: The MAP can serve as a core research instrument with additional outcome measures added as required. The collection of a set of reliable quantitative measures of problems among drug and alcohol users by research or treatment personnel for outcome evaluation purposes need not be time-consuming.

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Cited by 422 publications
(281 citation statements)
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“…12 Frequency of drug use was dichotomized to compare daily substance use (DSU) versus non-daily use (less than daily or none); this variable was used to reflect severity of substance use and its potential impact on daily functioning. Current mental disorders were identified through the MINI 6.0 11 while mental health symptoms and severity were collected through the 14-item Colorado Symptom Index (CSI).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…12 Frequency of drug use was dichotomized to compare daily substance use (DSU) versus non-daily use (less than daily or none); this variable was used to reflect severity of substance use and its potential impact on daily functioning. Current mental disorders were identified through the MINI 6.0 11 while mental health symptoms and severity were collected through the 14-item Colorado Symptom Index (CSI).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…physical, social and psychological domains), but was designed to be administered by a trained interviewer and lacks concurrent reliability when self-administered (13). The MAP was developed in 1998 for the UK addiction patient population (12). The purpose of this tool, alike with the ASI, is to evaluate treatment outcomes within global domains such as substance use, physical and psychological health, personal/social functioning as well as health risk behavior (12).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While addiction is characterized as a medical disorder that can be treated by health care practitioners within healthcare setting, it often has a direct relationship to a patient's social environment. A combination of factors including social stability, absence of illicit opioid use, reduced risk taking behavior (such as criminality), as well as physical and psychological health impact response to treatment are important risk factors to capture with measurement scales (12,13).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…But evaluation has been a challenge for services that have neither the time nor the expertise to conduct detailed outcome research with multidimensional outcome questionnaires such as the Addiction Severity Index (1,2), the Opiate Treatment Index (3), and the Maudsley Addiction Profile (4). While excellent for individual assessments or academic research, these questionnaires took a while to complete, required the presence of the client in question, and could not combine subsections to produce a single total score for easy analysis by non-researchers.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%