Publication | Closed Access
Medication take-home doses and contingency management.
37
Citations
24
References
1998
Year
Substance UsePharmacotherapyDrug DispensingDrug TreatmentSubstance Use DisordersSubstance Use TreatmentPharmaceutical PracticeAddiction MedicineMethadone Maintenance PatientsPharmaceutical CareHealth SciencesPsychiatryAddiction TreatmentPharmacologyCocaine DependenceSubstance AbuseAddictionPatient SafetyContingency ManagementSubstance AddictionMedicine12-Week Contingency ManagementAnesthesiology
Two studies examined contingent take-home medication doses during treatment of opiate or cocaine dependence. In the first study, methadone maintenance patients were randomly assigned to one of two 8-week baseline take-home (TH) conditions differing in frequency of clinic visits per week. This was followed by a 12-week contingency management (CM) procedure in which frequent THs resulted from drug-free urines. Participants receiving more frequent THs during baseline had lower illicit drug use during the first 6 weeks of CM. In the second study, fluoxetine (0-, 20-, 40-mg) TH doses were similarly contingent in treatment of cocaine dependence. The 40-mg group used less cocaine during contingency than did other groups. The combination of fluoxetine and environmental contingencies may produce benefit where neither alone is sufficient.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1