RESUMEN
This study examines the relationship between the patterns of use of alcohol and heroin by narcotics addicts, and evaluates the hypothesis--frequently reported during methadone maintenance--that this form of treatment can be causally implicated in an increased consumption of alcohol. Data were obtained on lifetime patterns of alcohol and heroin use of 375 Anglo and Chicano male addicts sampled from two treatment sources: the nonmethadone (drug-free) California Civil Addict Program (CAP) and several Southern California Methadone Maintenance (MM) programs. Repeated-measures MANOVAs revealed that alcohol and heroin consumption were inversely related throughout the addicts' careers. This pattern was evident in the addiction, treatment, and postdischarge stages of Anglo and Chicano addict careers, in both the CAP and MM samples. Consequently, the authors reject the hypothesis that increased alcohol consumption is caused solely by addicts' participation in methadone maintenance treatment. Rather, the findings suggest that addicts' alcohol use during methadone treatment reflects a lifetime pattern of increased alcohol use following any decline in heroin intake.