Acceptability and feasibility of incorporating contingency management into a public treatment program for homeless crack cocaine users in Brazil: A pilot study.

Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology, Vol 30(5), Oct 2022, 507-513; doi:10.1037/pha0000467Homeless substance users are particularly hard to treat. In this pilot study, we evaluated the acceptability and feasibility of incorporating Contingency Management (CM) into a public Abstinent-Contingent Housing (ACH) treatment program developed to treat currently homeless crack cocaine users. A total of 21 homeless crack cocaine users were randomized to receive 12 weeks of ACH alone (n = 9) or ACH plus CM (ACH + CM) (n = 12). Twelve treatment providers in the ACH treatment program were trained to deliver the CM intervention. CM was rated as relatively (41.7%) or very (58.3%) easy to understand and relatively (50%) or very (50%) easy to conduct by the ACH treatment providers. On a 10-point Likert scale, providers rated the importance of incorporating CM into public treatment programs for crack cocaine at M = 8.3 (SD = 2). Participants exposed to CM rated as relatively (33.3%) or very (66.7%) easy to understand. One hundred percent liked receiving the intervention “a lot,” and 78.9% believed it helped them achieve and maintain crack cocaine abstinence. Finally, compared to the ACH condition, the ACH + CM condition was consistently associated with better treatment retention and cocaine use outcome measures, yelling small to large effect sizes. However, possibly due to the small sample size, most of these differences did not achieve statistical significance. CM was well integra...
Source: Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research