A Community-Based Therapeutic Education Programme for People with Alcohol Use Disorder in France: A Qualitative Study (ETHER)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- -
- Explore the link between individual factors (history of alcohol use, social and family contexts, etc.) and the decision to participate in the programme.
- -
- Observe how these individual factors influenced the implementation of the alcohol harm reduction strategies taught.
- -
- Highlight Choizitaconso’s strengths and weaknesses.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Description of the Choizitaconso TPE Programme
2.2. Choizitaconso’s Objectives
- -
- Promote patient empowerment and deconstruct feelings of self-stigma
- -
- Help patients to:
- (i)
- understand the mechanisms which provoke alcohol craving
- (ii)
- stop losing control over their alcohol consumption
- (iii)
- identify biological causes of AUD, with a view to helping them identify personal risk factors
- (iv)
- identify their own perceptions of AUD
- (v)
- acquire techniques to control their alcohol consumption
- (vi)
- learn to identify internal and external influences on alcohol consumption and at-risk situations
- (vii)
- learn to identify the impact of feelings on their behaviour
- (viii)
- assess their own expectations and desired effects of alcohol, by developing self-observation skills.
2.3. Study Design
2.4. Objectives of the Qualitative Study
- -
- What is the link between individual factors (history of alcohol use, social and family contexts, etc.) and the decision to participate in the Choizitaconso programme?
- -
- How do these individual factors influence implementation of the alcohol harm reduction strategies taught in Choizitaconso?
- -
- What are Choizitaconso’s strengths and weaknesses?
2.5. Method
2.6. Study Population
2.7. Inclusion Criteria
2.8. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. General Characteristics of Study Participants
3.2. Results of Sequential Thematic Analysis
3.2.1. The Context of Participation
- (a)
- Reasons for participation
“It’s the family; it’s the relatives, who are the trigger. Because yes, I think we are aware, well, I was aware that I drank too much, but I didn’t think that it had so much importance and impact on my children, on my husband, on everything. And one day when it got really bad I said “Right. That’s it. I’ll have to”… acting on my own was complicated, so I spoke to my GP first; that seemed to be the most logical solution. He doesn’t deal with AUD so he sent me here.”Participant 1
“… well, I came to the CSAPA after my divorce, so I had no problem with alcohol consumption before; and it wasn’t my divorce in fact, it was the decision about custody over my son that made me drink. I look after my son a lot and I didn’t accept the decision. I got to see him every other weekend whereas [before] I took care of my son all the time; and that didn’t go down well with me, that my son was taken away from me.”Participant 12
“… I used to have chronic consumption because of the life I had before and which was difficult; it’s difficult to change; there was a kind of habit, of anxiety about things that were quite present, so that’s why I came here.”Participant 6
“So, I followed the programme; it was on the suggestion, of course, of Doctor C. and her assistants—who are psychologists, nurses, social workers, I think, or educators—like, that I had seen before, and I had come to see them because I was having problems as I kept drinking more and more (…)”Participant 8
“…I was very worried about my health, but mostly my mental health.”Participant 11
“Interviewer: When you started this programme, what was your objective? Respondent: to control my consumption. Not abstinence but to control my consumption.”Participant 16
“That’s why I came, to try and find help, to help me break this thing that I myself started, but which over time has become ritualised, and is now very deeply installed in my head.”Participant 5
“My goal is to get back to the age of forty when I hadn’t drunk at all since I was young.”Participant 13
“Not expectations, as I was telling you; it was to stay in touch with the disease and with, not to forget and to maintain vigilance over it, and this vigilance is precisely to talk about it and to continue to learn about oneself (…)”Participant 10
- (b)
- Alcohol-related representations
“I have the impression that people think that being an alcoholic is when you are totally wasted, or that an alcoholic is the local drunk with a bottle of plonk. I think that from the moment you drink alcohol, you are an alcoholic, but there are several degrees, that’s for certain.”Participant 13
“(…) I had a problem with alcohol compared to others who stop, because I think that’s really the difference. When you’re with friends, you can see those who can stop, because the way they function makes it that they’re not alcoholics, and there’s this kind of protection if someone decides “Right. I’m stopping”. And then there’s the one who has a problem with alcohol, who has another drink or two.”Participant 3
“(…) we always have these examples of Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, this and that, and everything, where people talk, but that’s in the movies, that’s on TV.”Participant 7
- (c)
- Previous or parallel care experiences in Choizitaconso
“I can’t remember. Honestly, it was another organisation that was a bit similar to the CSAPA, but I didn’t… I didn’t like it… or it was… so I didn’t continue and I stopped.”Participant 10
“(Selincro) is atrocious. I came back and I told the doctor «No, no way”; So, to avoid the desire to drink, to use it, it works very well. But it’s to consume everything. It’s impossible to eat, I wasn’t hungry any more, I felt like I was drained of all my energy.”Participant 1
“You’re locked up, and then there’s everything, it’s not based on addiction, it’s: you arrive there, you’re sealed up, my mother, the first time she came to see me she said: “get my son out of there”.Participant 11
“(…) I consulted a person, but I think it wasn’t really, how can I put it, I think I wasn’t ready. I wasn’t ready; it was a person who seemed qualified, I’m not questioning the professional.”Participant 3
“(…) there are a lot of workshops, (…). You see a psychologist once a week, a psychiatrist, there is no time limit, and you have other people following you all the time, and everyone is up to speed with the case (…). It’s very professional (…) but at the moment, I don’t know, it’s a difficult period.”Participant 12
“(…) I continue to work with the doctor, who’s more in touch with real life, let’s say, and also more adapted to each person’s case, (…) when it’s really a psychological problem it’s better to treat it individually. So I think these two things were complementary.”Participant 5
“Respondent: (…) yes, so there was relaxation for example… Interviewer: In the Choizitaconso programme, there is a relaxation component? Respondent: ah okay, no, no. That’s another thing. I was talking about everything that was offered here.”Participant 10
3.2.2. Representations and Experiences
- (a)
- Pedagogical benefits
“Because for me, it was, how can I put it, really the first courses; I think it’s complete, in the sense that they really explain things to you. It’s here that I learnt what the quantity of alcohol represents, the different quantities of alcohol, in relation to one drink, two drinks, what that represents, the values [i.e., different doses, etc.] of alcohol, the dangers, the disease, the different dangers; I think it’s much more complete. (…) I know what I have left, how can I put it, my thoughts, when I went to other establishments, and all that, I said to myself that I had learned quite a lot here.”Participant 14
- (b)
- Skills acquisition and empowerment
“Something else that is also very important is that we learned to be able to observe ourselves.”Participant 11
“There was a session; it was a video that lasted maybe three minutes; in that video there were 15 s and those 15 s made me understand why I drank alcohol and I understood why I started; in 15 s, after spending three years trying to understand.”Participant 12
“That too was a big benefit of the centre; learning to, well learning… knowing how to stand up for myself: that is to say, at some point, I’m not three years old anymore, I’m not here to be lectured.”Participant 1
- (c)
- Deconstructing prejudice
“(…) is it that [i.e., the programme] which also helps to improve this reality of the image we have of ourselves: ‘I am a fragile human being, like him, like him, like her, like her’”Participant 11
“And it wasn’t that at all. I had a completely wrong idea of what it could be, and I found it comforting first of all to see people with me who, for me, were not the ‘alcoholic type’ [participant makes inverted commas sign], who [i.e., alcoholic types] are always quite negative about, their self-image (…) So for me, in terms of self-esteem, it was beneficial.”Participant 5
“The more you come to the CSAPA, the more you’re involved, and the more you can get away from that [i.e., the shame of coming and of alcohol]. I’m no longer ashamed now. I used to come with my workbag, because there’s a pharmacy opposite, and I said to myself ‘People need to think that I’m coming because I’m a medical professional’. Now I’m never ashamed to come to a CSAPA.”Participant 14
“Because guilt damages your self-esteem, that’s it: “yes, I’m a nothing so I drink”. And this idea… I don’t like the word ‘control’, to have the freedom to take it or not, and even if I wanted to get drunk, I could do it without feeling guilty.”Participant 11
“Well, anyway, it’s never dramatic, because I say to myself that I’ve taken two hundred steps forward and now I’ve taken one backwards, so it’s not serious, I’m going to take two hundred more, so it’s not serious. Whereas before, I would take a step backwards, I would drink and I would say to myself: “Well, I’ve screwed up everything, I’m starting again”.Participant 12
“My main objective was total abstinence; it didn’t allow me to reach an objective, it simply allowed me to say to myself that it could be a moment of relaxation—the fact of drinking a beer—it could be a moment of well-being and relaxation.”Participant 15
“Ah yes, I don’t know, it happened after three or four sessions. Yes, they said: ‘you can continue, but you can choose’. [participant makes inverted commas sign] I can keep going.”Participant 7
- (d)
- Harm reduction
“Yes absolutely, but that’s it. As for the rest, I didn’t feel, I didn’t feel sick at all. And in fact, I wasn’t [sick]. D. C. had me tested, everything was fine.”Participant 8
“(…) no, that’s something I didn’t feel at all; I didn’t feel before that I was suffering from any pathologies linked to my alcohol consumption, so obviously I don’t feel I’ve reduced the risks by controlling it better. Do you understand what I mean?”Participant 1
“That’s it. Even though I’ve never had a car accident, I’ve never fallen, I’ve never hurt myself, I’ve never spoken badly to anyone; but the fact remains that in the morning, one, your head isn’t the same, and two, you don’t have the same mental alertness.”Participant 1
“Yes. But I don’t drink the same things anymore. Before, I used to drink pastis, whisky, strong spirits and now I drink two glass of white wine.”Participant 9
“For example, one thing that’s interesting, is to say, “here, one glass equals this” [i.e., quantity for standard unit] and it’s true, it’s not the glass that you serve yourself at your friends’ house, where you actually drink three glasses…”Participant 6
“I used to do quite a lot of sport; I used to cycle and swim and when I started drinking again, I gave up completely. And then, little by little, I started again.”Participant 15
“(…) so at the same time I’ve lost weight. I’ve lost 10 kg, so obviously I’m better. And as I’m quite sporty, I go cycling or skiing in the mountains, so yes, 10 kilos less is nice all the same.”Participant 3
“I went from 94 to 82 kg. I lost 12 kg. And my liver feels much better. It’s happy. So it’s perhaps a bit early to give you more consolidated data, I would say. No, I get up much earlier in the morning, I sleep a lot. I don’t have too many problems falling asleep, and I have proper nights. That’s about it, 8 h of sleep is enough for m; before I needed 10, 11, 12 h. I’m already a little less tired, no more cramps, and physically it’s improved.”Participant 2
“Even alcohol, I’m not worried anymore. Before I knew that even after four years it could start again. And now I don’t have that feeling anymore. I don’t want to say I’m cured, it’s over, but I’m at peace, I’m not worried.”Participant 4
“It helped me not be hospitalised, to manage on my own with… not to go back to hospital, whereas before I would have gone maybe a week later to a clinic, but for a month and a half.”Participant 12
3.2.3. TPE Strengths
- (a)
- Workshop climate
“Then I remember, there were… it wasn’t like role-playing but there were quite a few workshops where we put ourselves in other people’s shoes and I found that really interesting. (…) it involved a lot of games between us and a lot of discussions.”Participant 16
“It gives you hope to spend time with people who have experiences, to be able to talk about them too, it’s important”.Participant 14
“(…) I don’t have any problems with my wife and children, everyone is fine, I have no worries. It also helped me to put things into perspective and to say to myself… so, this group helped me do that. Helped put things into perspective and to say to myself: ‘well, I’m not too badly off and I don’t have too much to complain about compared to some people who are marked by the nasty things in life. Because that’s kind of what it’s about”.Participant 7
“(…) the whole team is really good, so it’s… there was a very good atmosphere as well, it wasn’t at all… how can I put it… dramatic or whatever; it was… even if we weren’t there to have a laugh, but it wasn’t an oppressive atmosphere.”Participant 6
“(…) one thing: it also allowed me to re-socialise because alcohol makes you feel less social. Well, except for people who go to nightclubs or bars or who still manage to work. But for me, teleworking and being at home all the time, I had reached a point where I didn’t see anyone anymore”.Participant 2
- (b)
- Content and organization of sessions (i.e., collective and individual)
“(…) so you have the choice to drink or not to drink, so you don’t see it as a forbidden product anymore.”Participant 13
“And what I liked was that we were all in different situations in terms of consumption. There were abstainers, there were those who drank regularly; there were those who used occasionally, so that’s what I liked in fact.”Participant 16
“And then I used the methods taught for alcohol in order not to smoke again. And it worked. Because I would say to myself: “don’t take the cigarette, wait five minutes, it will pass, do something quickly” and that’s what I did and it worked. Think about something else, keep busy, be active. It just doesn’t happen all by itself. I think that in order for it to last, you have to continue using the methods. Yes. I’m very happy with it, it’s all positive”.Participant 4
“(…) the schedules were well adapted, the rhythm was well adapted, the speakers, well I have absolutely nothing to say against this place. On the contrary.”Participant 5
“The fact that you have to organise yourself for a long-term thing, something that is already planned, yes. All this means that you have to keep your commitments.”Participant 3
3.2.4. TPE Limitations
- (a)
- Constraining nature of the programme
“(…) what was difficult for me was the distance. (…) I had difficulty because of the distance: (…) in [name of home town] in the Bouches-du-Rhône. So that’s a 70-km return trip each time. That’s it. It’s the time. During working hours. The distance, the time it takes, and also financially. The cost of travel… I spend 10 € each time. A round trip. So that’s it, you have to have the budget (…)”Participant 1
“It was a big sacrifice because it meant that I had to make appointments every fortnight in Avignon; well it was difficult, believe me. The reason I agreed was because it was important for me, because it required sacrifices in my work. I was under such pressure… even if it was between noon and two-thirty, [i.e., lunch hours] it was too much, and afterwards, by the time I got back for a meeting, my afternoon was practically ruined.”Participant 14
“But there is one thing where actually at certain times I found it a bit too directed. ‘No, no, we’re not going there, that’s where we want…’ [Respondent cites main facilitator]”Participant 7
“(…) yes, with everyone, when we didn’t go in her direction, this lady didn’t like it, and when she was the moderator… she explained something to us that we didn’t understand, and because we didn’t understand it, it made her angry.”Participant 13
- (b)
- Difficulty to apply lessons and achieve programme objectives
“There are things all the same to, there are things to improve, because as I told you earlier (…) there’s always that thing lingering behind like, because alcohol is everywhere unfortunately; even if you’ve no desire to buy it, it’s in your head.”Participant 12
“It’s not perfect, it’s not that, but I think it’s [i.e., alcohol consumption] not a good option. But, like, I haven’t found another way [i.e., something besides alcohol to help] yet. And I’m not strong enough on myself to say no.”Participant 1
“(…) well, it’s always this problem of ritual, until you break it; it’s been there for too long and I find it a bit difficult to change.”Participant 5
“Yes well, it’s never achieved, but I stuck to what I told myself: no more daily consumption. So, I sometimes drink quite a lot at certain festive occasions. I don’t know if I’ve reached the objective, but I’ve reached one in any case.”Participant 6
“And then there were little tools that I had, which I had been given in therapy sessions and that I’d never managed to put into practice, to implement.”Participant 2
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Semi-Structured PWAUD Interview Guide | |
---|---|
Opening question | Can you tell me about your experience with the programme Choizitaconso? |
If the interviewed person does not mention these topics spontaneously, the interviewer must do so. |
|
Participant | Age (Years) | Gender | Employment Status | Marital Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
01 | 45–49 | Female | Employed | Married with child(ren) |
02 | 65–69 | Male | Employed | Living alone with no child |
03 | 50–54 | Male | Retired | Married |
04 | 65–69 | Female | Retired | Living alone with child(ren) |
05 | 50–54 | Female | Employed | Married with child(ren) |
06 | 74–79 | Male | Retired | Living alone with no child |
07 | 55–59 | Male | Retired | Married with child(ren) |
08 | 74–79 | Female | Retired | Married with child(ren) |
09 | 64–69 | Female | Housewife | Married with child(ren) |
10 | 65–69 | Male | Retired | Married with no child |
11 | 50–54 | Female | Employed | In a relationship, with no child |
12 | 31–35 | Male | Employed | Divorced with child(ren) |
13 | 55–59 | Female | Employed | Living alone with no child |
14 | 31–35 | Female | Unemployed | In a relationship, with child(ren) |
15 | 55–59 | Male | Unemployed | Widowed with no child |
16 | 55–59 | Female | Training | Separated with child(ren) |
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Costa, M.; Barré, T.; Antwerpes, S.; Coste, M.; Bureau, M.; Ramier, C.; Maradan, G.; Riccobono-Soulier, O.; Vassas-Goyard, S.; Casanova, D.; et al. A Community-Based Therapeutic Education Programme for People with Alcohol Use Disorder in France: A Qualitative Study (ETHER). Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 9228. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19159228
Costa M, Barré T, Antwerpes S, Coste M, Bureau M, Ramier C, Maradan G, Riccobono-Soulier O, Vassas-Goyard S, Casanova D, et al. A Community-Based Therapeutic Education Programme for People with Alcohol Use Disorder in France: A Qualitative Study (ETHER). International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(15):9228. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19159228
Chicago/Turabian StyleCosta, Marie, Tangui Barré, Saskia Antwerpes, Marion Coste, Morgane Bureau, Clémence Ramier, Gwenaelle Maradan, Olivier Riccobono-Soulier, Stéphanie Vassas-Goyard, Danielle Casanova, and et al. 2022. "A Community-Based Therapeutic Education Programme for People with Alcohol Use Disorder in France: A Qualitative Study (ETHER)" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 15: 9228. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19159228
APA StyleCosta, M., Barré, T., Antwerpes, S., Coste, M., Bureau, M., Ramier, C., Maradan, G., Riccobono-Soulier, O., Vassas-Goyard, S., Casanova, D., & Carrieri, P. (2022). A Community-Based Therapeutic Education Programme for People with Alcohol Use Disorder in France: A Qualitative Study (ETHER). International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(15), 9228. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19159228