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Are Incentives Effective in Improving Participation and Outcomes in Treatment for Substance-Abusing Offenders?. Michael L. Prendergast, Ph.D. Elizabeth A. Hall, Ph.D. Integrated Substance Abuse Programs University of California, Los Angeles. ACJRC October 22, 2010. Contingency Management.
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Are Incentives Effective in Improving Participation and Outcomes in Treatment for Substance-Abusing Offenders? Michael L. Prendergast, Ph.D. Elizabeth A. Hall, Ph.D. Integrated Substance Abuse Programs University of California, Los Angeles ACJRC October 22, 2010
Contingency Management • Procedures that arrange the environment so that certain actions (behaviors) are reliably and predictably followed by certain consequences. • Consists of a schedule of reinforcement, which specifies the relationship between the behavior and the delivery of the consequence, either a reinforcer or a punisher.
Operant Conditioning • Operant Conditioning • type of learning in which behavior is strengthened if followed by reinforcement or diminished if followed by punishment • Law of Effect • Thorndike’s principle that behaviors followed by favorable consequences become more likely, and behaviors followed by unfavorable consequences become less likely
Operant Conditioning • Reinforcer • any event that strengthens the behavior it follows
Operant conditioning term Positive reinforcement Negative reinforcement Description Add a positive stimulus (e.g., incentives such as a privilege, money, candy) Remove an aversive stimulus (e.g., daily reporting, seatbelt buzzer) Ways to increase behavior:
Principles of Reinforcement • Primary reinforcer • innately reinforcing stimulus • i.e., satisfies a biological need (fish) • Conditioned reinforcer • stimulus that gains its reinforcing power through its association with primary reinforcer (e.g., fishclicker) • secondary reinforcer (e.g., money)
Typical Contingency Management Procedures in Drug Treatment • Participants earn vouchers for providing drug-free urines, which indicate recent abstinence. • Participants may also earn vouchers for other behaviors that promote treatment goals. • Vouchers can be exchanged for goods or services that are consistent with the individual participant's treatment plan.
Increasing Engagement in Prison-based Drug Treatment PI: William Burdon, PhD Aims: • Test the impact of a behavioral reinforcement intervention on inmate engagement in prison-based substance abuse treatment • thereby improving psychosocial functioning over the course of treatment and post-release outcomes (e.g., decreased drug use, reincarceration) • Assess the process by which this evidence-based innovation is implemented and sustained within prison-based treatment programs
Study Features • Variety of behaviors were reinforced • Client and staff buy-in • Low cost incentives
Evaluating Voucher-based Contingencies in a Drug Court & SACPA (Prop 36) Court PI: Michael Prendergast, PhD Aims: • Determine the impact of vouchers to reinforce abstinence from illicit drugs and completion of treatment plan goals during participation in a drug court treatment program. • Determine the impact of vouchers to reinforce abstinence from illicit drugs and completion of treatment plan goals six months after completing the drug court treatment program.
Study Features • Participants were referred by the Drug Court or Prop 36 Court into substance abuse treatment (MATRIX model)
Participants were randomly assigned to 1 of 4 experimental conditions: • Standard Treatment (ST) ($0) • ST + Drug Testing Group ($20/wk; $540 max) • ST + Treatment Plan Group ($20/wk; $540 max) • ST + Combined Group ($40/wk; $1,080 max)
Study Features (cont.) • Flat reinforcement schedule • Incentives were delivered by research staff • Vouchers were exchangeable for goods or services that were consistent with the participant’s treatment goals
Using Incentives to Improve Parolee Participation and Attendance in Community Treatment PI: Michael Prendergast, PhD Aims: • Determine whether offering an incentive (voucher) increases admission to community treatment • Determine whether providing incentives for attendance results in greater retention in treatment • Assess the long-term impact of the use of incentives on drug use, crime, and psychosocial outcomes • Assess issues of acceptability, satisfaction, and sustainability of the use of incentives among staff and clients
Study Features • One behavior (attendance) reinforced • Escalating reinforcement schedule • Staff involvement in design and delivery of incentive
Thank You Questions? www.uclaisap.org Acknowledgements NIDA Grants R01DA13114, R01DA13114S, R01DA017856