Employment-based Reinforcement to Motivate Drug Abstinence in the Treatment of Drug Addiction. - 1
NCT ID: NCT00249496
Last Updated: 2017-09-18
Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
51 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2003-10-31
2007-08-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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SETTING The study was conducted at the Center for Learning and Health, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD. The workplace included a sign-in station, a urinalysis laboratory, and three workrooms. The workrooms contained 47 computer workstations.
PRE-RANDOMIZATION PROCEDURES Intake Assessment At intake, participants signed informed consent and completed an interview. Urine samples were collected and tested for cocaine, opiates, benzodiazepines, methadone, and amphetamines. A questionnaire was administered to assess participants' capacity to operate a keyboard. The Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI), 2nd ed. was administered to assess drug dependence. Other assessment tools included the Addiction Severity Index - Lite (ASI-Lite), the Risk Assessment Battery (RAB), the Wide Range Achievement Test (WRAT-3), and a reading assessment. Participants were paid $30 in vouchers for completing the interview.
Workroom and Urinalysis Procedures Eligible participants were enrolled in phase 1 and could work in the workplace from 10 AM-12 PM and 1 PM-3 PM every weekday for 6 months. During this phase, participants worked on computerized training programs designed to teach them to become data entry operators. On Monday, Wednesday and Friday, participants provided a urine sample under observation. Breath samples were tested for alcohol. Urine samples were tested for opiates and cocaine and participants received graphs showing current and prior drug test results. Participants earned a base pay of $8.00 per hour in vouchers. Additionally, participants could earn approximately $2.00 per hour in vouchers in productivity pay for working on training programs. Earnings accumulated in the participant's account until exchanged for a gift card or other approved goods and services.
Initially, participants could attend the workplace independent of their urinalysis results. This "workplace induction" continued for at least 4 weeks and until the participant worked for at least 5 min on 15 workdays. After workplace induction, participants were required to provide evidence of cocaine abstinence to work and to maintain maximum pay. Specifically, participants gained access to their workrooms if urinary benzoylecgonine concentration was \<300 ng/mL or at least 20% lower per day since the last sample submitted. Participants who provided a cocaine-positive urine sample could not work until they provided a new sample that met the criteria. Upon return to work, the rate of base pay was reduced to $1.00 per hour. Base pay was then increased by $1.00 per hour every day that a participant provided a sample that met the criteria and worked at least 5 minutes until reaching $8.00 per hour. Missing samples were treated as positive. After a participant provided cocaine-negative samples for three consecutive weeks, the abstinence contingency was extended to opiates (ie, urinary benzoylecgonine and morphine concentrations of \<300 ng/mL, or decreases in benzoylecgonine and morphine concentrations by at least 20% per day since the last sample submitted). After providing cocaine- and opiate-negative samples for three consecutive weeks the contingency was expanded to include alcohol if the participant had provided alcohol positive (≥0.003 ng/L) samples during the opiate and cocaine contingency period. This stepped contingency program is described in detail elsewhere.
The training programs were designed for individuals with no typing skills. The programs were divided into small steps. Participants practiced steps in one-minute intervals until meeting mastery criteria for the step. Participants earned $0.03 per 20 correct characters typed, and lost $0.01 per 2 incorrect characters typed. Additional productivity pay ranging from $0.25 to $2.00 was provided for achieving step mastery. Participants who finished the typing program proceeded to a data entry training program, which included similar productivity pay contingencies. A detailed report of the results of phase 1 is provided elsewhere.
RANDOMIZATION Eligibility for phase 2 was assessed at the end of the fifth month of phase 1. Participants who attended the workplace on at least 50% of possible days and provided urine samples that met the reinforcement criteria on at least 80% of the collection opportunities during the four weeks prior to assessment, and who attained minimal typing proficiency qualified to participate in phase 2. Individuals not meeting criteria at the end of the fifth month who were still attending the workplace at least occasionally were reevaluated in the sixth month. This reevaluation occurred for seven participants, all of whom were admitted to phase 2 of the study. After meeting phase 2 eligibility criteria, participants were randomly assigned to employment only (n = 24) or abstinence-contingent employment (n = 27), and hired as employees of the nonprofit data entry business for one year. One eligible person declined to participate in phase 2 due to fears of losing social security benefits due to employment, and another was assigned to a discontinued study group (see below). The two groups did not differ significantly on any demographic measure assessed at intake. The phase 2 participants' mean age was 43 years, 77% were female, 88% were black, and 98% were living in poverty.
All stratification and randomization procedures were computerized and carried out by a data coordinator who did not have contact with participants. Participants were stratified according to whether 50% or more of the urine samples collected during the first four weeks of the induction period were positive for opiates; whether 75% or more of these samples were positive for cocaine; and whether they achieved an exceptionally high level of tying proficiency. Personnel who conducted monthly assessments were blind to group assignment.
POST-RANDOMIZATION PROCEDURES Phase 2 Assessments An interview was conducted immediately prior to randomization that included drug testing, the ASI-Lite, the RAB, the Vocational Educational Assessment (VEA, for assessing attitudes about work and employment history), and the Treatment Services Review (TSR, for assessing the use of professional services), and questionnaires covering adverse events and workplace satisfaction. These assessments were repeated every 30 days, except for the RAB, which was only conducted during the 6th and 12th months.
Phase 2 Employment Procedures Upon enrollment in phase 2, participants began employment as data entry operators in Hopkins Data Services.40 While employed by Hopkins Data Services, participants could work from 9 AM to 4 PM, with 1 hour for lunch. Participants earned an hourly wage slightly higher than or equal to the legal minimum (originally $5.25 per hour, but increased to $6.15 per hour when the minimum wage in Maryland increased) and pay for productivity. Contingencies for productivity pay were programmed such that participants would earn approximately $4.00 per hour in productivity pay for normative performance. Participants received regular bi-weekly paychecks instead of vouchers. Although prior employees of Hopkins Data Services performed data entry jobs for paying customers,40 given the nature of the control group (ie, no contingencies on drug abstinence), participants in this study performed data entry jobs in which they entered data batches from completed orders.
Study Groups Participants assigned to the abstinence-contingent employment group were required to provide drug negative urine samples to access the workrooms on mandatory collection days . Initially, all Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays were mandatory days. If a participant in this group provided a positive sample or failed to provide a sample on a mandatory day, then the participant was denied access to the workplace on that day, and until the participant provided a sample that met the criteria. In addition, participants whose urine sample did not meet the criteria were given a reset in productivity pay from $4.00 per hour to $1.00 per hour. After a reset, a participant's productivity pay increased by $1.00 per hour per day that the participant worked for a minimum of five minutes, until the standard rate of approximately $4.00 per hour was reinstated.
Participants in the abstinence-contingent employment group who provided urine samples that met the criteria on 30 consecutive calendar days were placed on a random mandatory urine testing schedule. Initially, a schedule was established in which an average of one out of every two Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays were designated as mandatory collection and testing days. After every 30 days in which all mandatory samples met the abstinence criteria the average was further reduced by one, until an average of one out of every six Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays were randomly designated as mandatory days. Participants could call the workplace to inquire whether that day's urine sample collection was mandatory. If a participant provided a positive sample on a mandatory day or missed a mandatory sample then routine mandatory testing was reinstated and the schedule-thinning process repeated from the beginning. Participants were informed of schedule changes by the workplace manager and given a written notice describing the change. Participants received urinalysis feedback graphs similar to phase 1, however, only the results of mandatory tests were displayed on the graph.
Participants assigned to the employment only group were required to provide urine samples, but were permitted to work independent of the results of urinalysis. Rate of pay was also unaffected by the urinalysis results. In order to equate the urinalysis feedback across groups, employment only participants were placed on a thinning schedule of feedback in which the progressive thinning occurred every 30 days, independent of the participant's urinalysis results. Urine samples from participants in both groups were collected for data purposes every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday that a participant attended the workplace, although participants were only given feedback about the urinalysis results on selected days.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Employment Only
Employment Only participants will be offered employment for one year, but these participants will not have to provide drug-free urine samples to work.
Employment Only
Employment Only participants will be offered employment for one year, but these participants will not have to provide drug-free urine samples to work.
Contingency Management
Participants in the Contingency Management group will be employed for one year in a Therapeutic Workplace business and will have to provide drug-free urine samples to work and earn salary.
Contingency management
Participants in the Contingency Management group will be employed for one year in a Therapeutic Workplace business and will have to provide drug-free urine samples to work and earn salary.
Interventions
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Contingency management
Participants in the Contingency Management group will be employed for one year in a Therapeutic Workplace business and will have to provide drug-free urine samples to work and earn salary.
Employment Only
Employment Only participants will be offered employment for one year, but these participants will not have to provide drug-free urine samples to work.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Applicants will be blind to the full details of the eligibility criteria.
* Unemployed
* Provided a urine sample at intake with a detectable concentration of cocaine metabolite or provided a cocaine positive sample during regular urinalysis testing at a methadone maintenance program
* Met DSM-IV criteria for cocaine dependence
* Were receiving welfare benefits in Baltimore, MD
* Received a score of less than or equal to 80% correct on a reading assessment
Exclusion Criteria
* Reported hallucinations
* Being incarcerated or otherwise under constant monitoring
* Earned less than or equal to $200 in unreported taxable income from legal activity in the previous month
* Having physical limitations that prevented typing
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
NIH
Johns Hopkins University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Kenneth Silverman, Ph.D.
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Johns Hopkins University
Locations
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The Center for Learning and Health
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Countries
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References
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DeFulio A, Donlin WD, Wong CJ, Silverman K. Employment-based abstinence reinforcement as a maintenance intervention for the treatment of cocaine dependence: a randomized controlled trial. Addiction. 2009 Sep;104(9):1530-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2009.02657.x.
DeFulio A, Silverman K. Employment-based abstinence reinforcement as a maintenance intervention for the treatment of cocaine dependence: post-intervention outcomes. Addiction. 2011 May;106(5):960-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2011.03364.x. Epub 2011 Mar 7.
Other Identifiers
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WIRB 2093
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id