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Promoting Awareness for Motivational Incentives in Addiction Treatment (PAMI).

Presented at the NIDA Blending Conference, "Blending Addiction Science & Treatment: The Impact of Evidence-Based Practices on Individuals, Families, and Communities," Cincinnati, OH, June 2-3, 2008.

John A. Hamilton, LMFT, LADC (Regional Network of Programs, Inc., NE Node), Maxine L. Stitzer, PhD (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, MA Node), Amy Shanahan, MS, CAC, CASAC (Northeast ATTC).

This session of the 2008 NIDA Blending Conference featured two presentations about the NIDA/SAMHSA Blending Team Product, "Promoting Awareness for Motivational Incentives" (PAMI). The first provides an overview of the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network (CTN) and its unique features and key tasks. The NIDA/SAMHSA Blending Process was set up to help move the research from the CTN into the world of clinical practice, developing "Dissemination Products" that are released at the same time the related research papers are published. There have been five Blending Teams so far, each of which is described here. The PAMI team was tasked to create materials to increase awareness about Motivational Incentives (MI) that incorporated examples from the Motivational Incentives for Enhanced Drug Abuse Recovery (MIEDAR) CTN protocol. Outcomes from the MIEDAR study are included at the end of this presentation.

The second presentation in the session, by Maxine Stitzer, focuses on why Motivational Incentives is an intervention worth adopting. It describes how MI works, using negative urines as objective evidence and providing immediate rewards (vouchers or a drawing for prizes) for negative urinalyses, and describes the scientific evidence supporting this intervention as an effective way to encourage prolonged abstinence in patients. It also describes the "fishbowl" method for prize-drawings, and the ways this intervention can be implemented at low cost. Though outcomes from the CTN MIEDAR study, and other MI research, have been positive, this intervention is still infrequently used. Challenges to adoption are discussed, along with suggestions of why overcoming implementation barriers is worthwhile. (Presentation, PDF, English, 2008)

Keywords: Behavior therapy | Blending Team Product | Clinician information | Contingency Management (CM) | Dissemination | MIEDAR | Motivational incentives | Stimulant abuse | Training | NIDA Blending Conference, 2008

Document No: 276

Submitted by CTN Dissemination Librarians (6/16/2008).

 
AUTHORS SEARCH LINK
Hamilton, John A. search mail
Shanahan, Amy search
Stitzer, Maxine L. search mail
PROTOCOLS
NIDA-CTN-0006 search www
NIDA-CTN-0007 search www
NODES & CTPs
Mid-Atlantic (Lead) search www
Glenwood Life Counseling Center search  
HARBEL Prevention and Recovery Center search www
OASIS Clinic search  
Delaware Valley search www
Achievement Through Counseling and Treatment search
Thomas Jefferson Intensive Substance Abuse Treatment Program search www
New England search
  LMG Programs, Inc. search www
New York search www
Greenwich House, Inc. search www
Lower Eastside Service Center (LESC) search www
Pacific Region search www
Aegis Medical Systems search www
Matrix Institute on Addictions search www
Rocky Mountain Regional search www
Arapahoe/Douglas Mental Health Network search www
Crossroads Turning Points, Inc. search www
Southern Consortium search www
Charleston Center search www
Circle Park Behavioral Health (Florence, Salt Lake City) search www

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Supported by a grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse to the University of Washington Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute.
The materials on this site have neither been created nor reviewed by NIDA.
Updated 4/2009 -- http://ctndisseminationlibrary.org/display/276.htm
info@ctndisseminationlibrary.org
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