Publication | Open Access
Cognitive-behavioral therapy plus contingency management for cocaine use: Findings during treatment and across 12-month follow-up.
149
Citations
33
References
2003
Year
Substance UseBehavioral AddictionMental HealthDrug TreatmentSubstance Use DisordersPsychologySocial SciencesSubstance Use RecoverySubstance Use TreatmentClinical PsychologyAddiction MedicinePsychiatryAddiction TreatmentBehavioral PharmacologyAddiction PsychologyCocaine UseSubstance AbuseCm ContingentAddictionCognitive-behavioral TherapyContingency ManagementAddiction Health Service ResearchSubstance AddictionMedicinePsychopathology
Contingency management (CM) rapidly reduces cocaine use, but its effects subside after treatment. Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) produces reductions months after treatment. Combined, the 2 might be complementary. One hundred ninety-three cocaine-using methadone-maintained outpatients were randomly assigned to 12 weeks of group therapy (CBT or a control condition) and voucher availability (CM contingent on cocaine-negative urine or noncontingent). Follow-ups occurred 3, 6, and 12 months posttreatment. Primary outcome was cocaine-negative urine (urinalysis 3 times/week during treatment and once at each follow-up). During treatment, initial effects of CM were dampened by CBT. Posttreatment, there were signs of additive benefits, significant in 3- versus 12-month contrasts. Former CBT participants were also more likely to acknowledge cocaine use and its effects and to report employment.
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