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Chapter 27. Contingency Management
CONTINGENCY MANAGEMENT: INTRODUCTION
Contingency management (CM) treatments for substance use disorders (SUDs) have been in the published literature since
the 1960s but have achieved a higher profile within the past two decades (see Higgins et al. 2008). CM treatments can
vary in many respects, but the central feature common to all of them is the systematic application of reinforcing or
punishing consequences in order to achieve therapeutic goals. With regard to treatment of SUDs, CM most commonly
involves the systematic application of positive reinforcement to increase abstinence from drug use, an approach referred
to as abstinence reinforcement therapy, but also to facilitate other therapeutic changes, including retention in treatment,
attendance at therapy sessions, and compliance with medication regimens. Typically, CM is used as part of a more
comprehensive treatment intervention. Below we outline the scientific rationale underlying this treatment approach,
discuss the basic elements of CM, and discuss its treatment efficacy and effectiveness.
Preparation of this manuscript was supported by research grants DA09378, DA14028, and DA08076 (Higgins); and DA13107, DA19386,
and DA19497 (Silverman) from the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
SCIENTIFIC RATIONALE
CM is a generic behavioral intervention based on the principles of operant conditioning, namely reinforcement and
punishment. The idea of using behavioral interventions to treat SUDs is quite rational considering the extensive empirical
evidence demonstrating that operant conditioning plays an important role in the genesis and maintenance of repeated
drug use and dependence (e.g., Higgins et al. 2004a). There is an extensive basic science literature going back to the
1940s showing that abused drugs will function as unconditioned positive reinforcers for laboratory animals in the same
way that food, water, and sex do. Laboratory animals readily learn arbitrary operant responses, such as pressing a lever
or pulling a chain, when the only consequence for doing so is the receipt of an injection of a prototypical drug of abuse
such as amphetamines, barbiturates, cocaine, or morphine. Laboratory animals not only will voluntarily ingest abused
drugs but, when given unconstrained access to cocaine and related drugs, they will consume them to the exclusion of
basic sustenance and to the point of overdose and death. There is a growing understanding of the neurobiology of these
drug-produced reinforcing effects, which appear to depend critically on effects in the mesolimbic dopamine system.
This basic research has also revealed that, while drug-produced reinforcement is powerful, it is also malleable and
sensitive to environmental context (Higgins et al. 2004a). For example, alterations in the schedule of drug availability,
increases in how much the subject has to work in order to obtain the drug, and increases in the availability of alternatives
to drug use can all produce orderly reductions in drug consumption. That is true with laboratory animals and with
drug-dependent human research subjects as well. In fact, a highly regarded series of studies conducted in the 1970s
demonstrated this point with individuals with severe alcoholism (e.g., Bigelow et al. 1975). In these studies, alcoholic
subjects resided on a hospital unit where they were permitted to purchase and consume alcohol under medically
supervised conditions. Abstinence from voluntary drinking increased when 1) access to an alternative reinforcer (i.e., an
enriched ward environment) was made available contingent on doing so, 2) monetary reinforcement was provided
contingent on abstinence from alcohol consumption, 3) the cost of drinking in the form of the amount of work required to
purchase the alcohol was increased, and 4) brief periods of social isolation were imposed contingent on drinking. Each of
these outcomes followed from predictions based on alcohol use being a form of operant responding, which by definition is
sensitive to environmental consequences. More recent studies conducted with cocaine and opioid abusers, marijuana
abusers, and cigarette smokers have similarly conformed to predictions based on operant conditioning and demonstrated
sensitivity of these different forms of drug use to systematically arranged environmental consequences (Higgins et al.
2004a).
An obvious question is, if drug use is so sensitive to environmental consequences, why is it that individuals continue
abusing drugs despite the many horrific adverse consequences that they experience? There are many answers to that
question, but here are three important ones to consider. First, many individuals do respond to adverse consequences; that
is, the majority of those who experiment with drug use, including the use of highly addictive drugs like cocaine, do not go
on to become dependent, and many of those who do become dependent resolve their problem without professional
treatment. Also, those drug-dependent individuals who seek treatment often do so following some untoward health or
social consequences related to their drug abuse. A safe assumption is that naturalistic reinforcement and punishment
contingencies are operative in these scenarios. Second, the reinforcing effects of drugs are relatively immediate and
reliable, while associated adverse consequences are typically more delayed and intermittent. Temporal delays and
inconsistent delivery weaken the effect of behavioral consequences. These features would favor a greater influence by the
reinforcing effects of abused drugs than by their adverse effects. Third, recent research has revealed potentially important
individual differences with regard to sensitivity to temporal delays that may be involved in vulnerability to drug
dependence (see Bickel and Marsch 2001). A normal aspect of our biological makeup is a preference for more immediate
over delayed reinforcement, all else being equal. Such a bias would have had obvious survival advantage in our
evolutionary history. However, as with most everything biological, there is variability in this characteristic, and
accumulating evidence indicates that individuals with SUDs discount the value of delayed consequences to a significantlyPrint: Chapter 27. Contingency Management http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=353782&print=yes…
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greater extent than do nonabuser matched controls (Bickel and Marsch 2001). That is, individuals with SUDs, more so
than those without, are more biased toward immediate reinforcement than delayed reinforcement, even when the more
immediate option is of lesser value. Note that such a bias can be expected to work against recovery from SUDs, as the
benefits of quitting drug use in terms of improved health, marriage, or vocation are going to be delayed in time relative to
the immediate reinforcing effects that will follow in short order from a return to drug abuse. Indeed, in one of the first
studies to look into this matter, greater discounting of delayed monetary reinforcement assessed upon treatment entry
predicted postpartum relapse to smoking among women who quit smoking during pregnancy (Yoon et al. 2007). This
relationship held even though the antepartum baseline assessment of delayed discounting was conducted almost 1 year
prior to the 6-month postpartum assessment, when most relapse to smoking was noted.
Overall, when considered together, the extensive literature supporting an important role of operant conditioning in drug
use, the sensitivity of drug use to systematically delivered environmental consequences, and a possible bias of
drug-dependent individuals toward immediate rather than delayed reinforcement all suggest that CM should be quite
useful in the treatment of SUDs. In order to drive recovery, CM interventions use the same reinforcement process that
drives repeated drug use. As is discussed in the following section, CM programs are designed to produce frequent,
relatively immediate positive reinforcement for abstaining from drug use, rather than relying exclusively on more delayed
naturalistic reinforcing consequences of recovery. This can be thought of as tailoring treatment to the known
characteristics of the patient population. As is outlined below, the extant evidence on the efficacy of CM interventions for
improving treatment outcomes across a wide range of different types of SUDs, populations, and settings suggests that the
reinforcement process has as important a role to play in recovery from drug abuse as it does in its genesis and
maintenance (Lussier et al. 2006).
BASIC ELEMENTS OF CM
Before we turn to the literature on the efficacy of CM interventions for SUDs, some discussion of the basic elements of
these interventions is warranted. A brief discussion is sufficient since these basic elements have been outlined elsewhere
(e.g., Higgins et al. 2008). Briefly, CM interventions promote behavioral change through the use of one of the following
generic types of contingencies administered alone or in combination.
Positive reinforcement. The delivery of a reinforcing consequence (e.g., a monetary voucher) contingent on meeting a
therapeutic goal (e.g., abstinence from recent drug use).
Negative reinforcement. The removal or a reduction in the intensity of an aversive event (e.g., job suspension) contingent on
meeting a therapeutic goal (e.g., successful completion of treatment).
Positive punishment. The delivery of an aversive event (e.g., social reprimand) contingent on evidence of the occurrence of a
therapeutically undesirable response (e.g., failure to attend therapy sessions).
Negative punishment. The removal of a positive condition (e.g., forfeiture of clinic privileges) contingent on the occurrence of an
undesirable response (e.g., resumption of drug use).
Reinforcement and punishment interventions are effective with SUDs, but the latter are disliked by patients and staff and
can inadvertently increase treatment dropout. The evidence suggests that CM interventions that are composed largely of
high rates of positive reinforcement along with judicious use of occasional negative punishment can be very effective at
retaining patients in treatment, reducing drug use, and improving other therapeutic outcomes (Lussier et al. 2006).
To be effective, CM interventions need to be carefully designed and implemented—with CM, the details matter. Below are
10 points to consider when designing an effective CM intervention.
- Use a written contract. A written contract is recommended.
Operationally define the therapeutic target. For example, when using a CM intervention to reinforce cocaine abstinence, the target
would be abstinence from recent cocaine use as defined by a cocaine-negative urine toxicology result.
Stipulate the schedule on which progress will be monitored. The schedule for monitoring progress should be well specified.
Staying with the example of a CM intervention for cocaine abstinence, the schedule might be a three-times-a-week (Monday,
Wednesday, Friday) assessment of recent cocaine use.
Schedule frequent opportunities for patients to experience the programmed consequences. CM interventions are designed to
promote new behavior while decreasing the frequency of well-learned behavior. As in any learning experience, repetition is
important. The thrice-weekly schedule mentioned above has been effective in reinforcing abstinence from cocaine and opioid
abuse. When designing the frequency of monitoring, one should consider practical issues, such as the half-life of the drug in
question.
Objectively verify that the target response occurred. The methods for verifying that the target response occurred must be
specified and should be objective; reliance on patient self-reports would not be adequate for these purposes. Furthermore,
because many individuals with SUDs have lost the confidence of family, friends, and employers in their veracity by the time they
enter treatment, objective monitoring of abstinence has the added benefit of providing an effective means to reduce suspicion
about their progress in treatment and to rebuild respect among their significant others. For CM interventions to be effective they
must be precise, and that is only possible when there is precision in determining whether the target response occurred. In
applications with SUDs, objective and precise verification typically entails some form of testing for biological markers of recent
drug use—for example, urine toxicology testing with specimen collection observed by a same-sex staff member would be
conducted at the thrice-weekly assessments.
When feasible, target single rather than multiple responses. CM interventions that focus on a single target (e.g., cocaine
abstinence) produce larger treatment effects on average than those that have multiple targets (e.g., abstinence from multiple
substances; Lussier et al. 2006). This appears to be simply a matter of trying to have a reasonable balance between the
behavioral change that is being targeted and the magnitude of the consequence being delivered.
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Specify what consequences will follow when the target response occurs and when it does not occur. The consequences that will
follow success and failure to emit the target behavior need to be made clear. For example, cocaine-negative urine toxicology
results would earn a voucher with a specified monetary value that can be used to purchase retail items in the community.
Cocaine-positive urine toxicology results would result in no voucher and a recommendation to meet with one’s counselor as soon
as possible. The exact schedule of voucher earnings over the course of the intervention would be specified.
- Specify the duration of the contract. For example, the voucher program would be operative from weeks 1 through 12 of treatment.
Minimize delays in delivering consequences following verification. Delays weaken behavioral consequences. Delivering the
consequence on the same day that occurrence of the target response is verified produces larger treatment effects than delivering
the consequence on the next day or later (Lussier et al. 2006). Treatment outcome studies have not shown whether differences in
response occur as a function of still further delays. Human laboratory studies suggest that the size of the treatment effect would
progressively decrease as the length of the delay increased, until a delay was reached beyond which efficacy would disappear (see
Higgins et al. 2004a).
Use a consequence of sufficient magnitude or intensity to function as an effective reinforcer or punisher. On average, larger-value
incentives produce larger treatment effects (Lussier et al. 2006).
With respect to the last point in the list above, it is important to note that the magnitude of reinforcement or punishment
necessary to change behavior will depend on the nature of the behavioral change involved and the patient population,
among other things. We know empirically that larger-value reinforcement on average results in larger treatment effects,
with effect size varying in a graded manner across daily incentive values of less than $5, $5–$10.99, $11–$16, and greater
than $16 (Lussier et al. 2006). Direction in choosing appropriate incentive magnitudes for the various populations and
types of therapeutic targets with which one may be working is best obtained by consulting previously published studies
involving those populations and therapeutic targets (or at least close approximations of them). The CM literature is
sufficiently large at this time that there should not be situations where one cannot find a relevant study or two that
provides at least some initial guidance in selecting appropriate parameters. Thereafter, some initial pilot testing of the
new intervention with the targeted clinical population is essential to working out unforeseen problems and fine-tuning the
parameters. The effects on treatment of SUDs of varying the intensity of punishment have not been assessed in any
systematic manner in the CM literature, because of the sparse use of all but minimal punishment interventions. Based on
the basic operant literature, effect size can be expected to vary as a function of the intensity of the punishment, and if the
research calls for a higher-intensity punishment, it is best to implement it early in the intervention rather than gradually
escalating intensity, which fosters habituation.
THE EVOLUTION OF A TREATMENT APPROACH: TREATMENT OUTCOME STUDIES ON
CONTINGENCY MANAGEMENT AND SUDS
Early CM Applications
As is typical of treatment development, early reports on the use of CM to treat SUDs first appeared in the form of
uncontrolled case studies in which, for example, smokers earned back portions of a monetary deposit contingent on
remaining abstinent from smoking, amphetamine abusers earned retail items donated by community businesses
contingent on drug abstinence, or individuals with chronic alcoholic dependence earned coupon booklets contingent on
submitting alcohol-negative breath specimens. A particularly impressive seminal controlled study in this area was
reported by Miller (1975). In this study, 20 homeless men with severe alcohol dependence were randomly assigned to a
control condition or CM intervention. Those in the control condition received the usual social services in the form of food,
clothing, and housing, while those in the CM condition received those same services as long as they sustained abstinence,
verified through breath alcohol testing and observation of signs of gross intoxication. Evidence of drinking resulted in a
5-day suspension from such services. Arrests for public drunkenness decreased and days of employment increased among
those in the contingent condition compared with the control condition.
These impressive findings were not followed up in the published literature in any systematic manner, but CM began to be
pursued as a treatment for other types of SUDs. Several controlled studies reported that abstinence levels increased when
cigarette smokers had to submit monetary deposits that they earned back in portions contingent on remaining abstinent
(e.g., Bowers et al. 1987). Other investigators reported controlled studies demonstrating that contingent cash payments
increased abstinence from cigarette smoking (e.g., Stitzer and Bigelow 1982). Large-scale workplace and community
incentive-based interventions for smoking cessation also appeared in the 1980s; however, results from those
interventions were not encouraging, most likely because of a failure by investigators to adhere to the points listed in the
numbered list earlier in this chapter, especially the points regarding reinforcement magnitude and frequency in the
monitoring of abstinence. For a more detailed examination of CM and smoking, see a review by Sigmon et al. (2008).
A particularly influential and programmatic series of controlled experimental studies was conducted with patients enrolled
in methadone treatment for opiate dependence (see Stitzer et al. 1984). These studies firmly established the efficacy of
using contingent positive reinforcement, such as access to clinic privileges (e.g., methadone take-home privileges), cash
payments, and adjustments in methadone dose, for increasing abstinence from illicit drug use. For example, 10 patients
receiving methadone maintenance treatment and with consistently positive urine toxicology results for benzodiazepine
use participated in a study using a within-subject reversal design (Stitzer et al. 1982). During a 12-week intervention
period, patients earned 2 days of medication take-home privileges, a cash payment ($15.00), or a 20-mg methadone dose
adjustment contingent on submitting benzodiazepine-negative urine toxicology results. Reinforcers were not available
during the baseline periods that preceded and followed the intervention period. During the intervention period, 43% of
specimens were benzodiazepine-negative compared with only 3.6% and 7.9% in the initial and final baseline periods.
These controlled studies from the 1980s provided a strong empirical foundation and clear proof-of-concept evidence forPrint: Chapter 27. Contingency Management http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=353782&print=yes…
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the development of CM as a formal treatment for SUDs. Other uncontrolled studies conducted with health care workers
during this same period suggested that CM may be efficacious in treating cocaine dependence (e.g., Crowley 1985–1986),
which was an important observation, considering that cocaine dependence was emerging as a major public health concern
in the United States at the time that the studies were conducted. The cocaine epidemic caught drug abuse experts
unprepared and created a strong need for effective treatments, and many of the treatments examined, both behavioral
and pharmacological, were ineffective. An exception was a CM intervention that has come to be known as voucher-based
reinforcement therapy (VBRT).
Voucher-Based Reinforcement Therapy
Cocaine and opiate abuse
With VBRT, patients earn vouchers that are exchangeable for retail items, which is contingent on biochemically verified
abstinence from recent drug use or meeting some other therapeutic target. The initial trials with VBRT integrated it with
an intensive behavioral therapy known as the community reinforcement approach (CRA) and thus did not allow for
inferences regarding what contributions VBRT was making to the positive outcomes obtained with the CRA-plus-vouchers
intervention (Higgins et al. 1991). Nevertheless, the positive outcomes obtained with the CRA-plus-VBRT intervention
were in such contrast with the many negative outcomes that were being reported in efforts to treat cocaine dependence
that it garnered a large amount of attention.
Inferences about the contributions of VBRT to research outcomes were made possible through a series of experiments in
which 40 cocaine-dependent outpatients were randomly assigned to 24 weeks of CRA treatment, with half of the patients
receiving VBRT during weeks 1–12 (Higgins et al. 1994). Seventy-five percent of patients assigned to the VBRT condition
were retained in treatment for the recommended 24 weeks, compared with only 40% in the condition without VBRT.
Those who received VBRT achieved an average of 11.5 + 2.0 weeks of continuous cocaine abstinence, compared with only
6.0 + 1.5 weeks of abstinence by those not receiving VBRT. This trial demonstrated that VBRT increased treatment
retention and cocaine abstinence among cocaine-dependent outpatients, a group for whom there were no reliably
efficacious treatments. Subsequent randomized clinical trials conducted in this same clinic demonstrated the reliability of
the treatment effects and showed that the positive effects of VBRT on cocaine abstinence remained discernible throughout
the 2 years following treatment entry (e.g., Higgins et al. 2007).
Because the basic voucher schedule arrangement used in those original studies by Higgins et al. (1994) with
cocaine-dependent outpatients became the prototype on which most subsequent VBRT interventions were based, we
describe it in detail here. Urine specimens were collected during treatment weeks 1–12 and tested for benzoylecgonine, a
cocaine metabolite. Specimens that tested negative for cocaine earned points that were recorded on vouchers and given
to subjects. Each point was worth the equivalent of $0.25. The first specimen to test negative for cocaine per subject
earned 10 points, or $2.50. The value of each subsequent consecutive cocaine-negative specimen increased by 5 points.
The equivalent of a $10 bonus was provided for each three consecutive cocaine-negative specimens. The intent of the
escalating magnitude of reinforcement and bonuses was to reinforce continuous cocaine abstinence. Cocaine-positive
specimens or failure to submit a scheduled specimen reset the value of vouchers back to the initial $2.50 value. This
feature was designed to punish relapse back to cocaine use following a period of sustained abstinence, with the intensity
of the punishment tied directly to the length of sustained abstinence that would be broken. In order to provide patients
with a reason to continue abstaining from use following a reset, submission of five consecutive cocaine-negative
specimens following a cocaine-positive specimen returned the value of points to where they were prior to the reset. Points
could not be lost once earned. Use of vouchers had to be approved by staff who recommended patients to use them to
support the healthy lifestyle changes that were being encouraged as part of the CRA therapy they received. Of course, all
purchases had to be legal and not involve alcohol, cigarettes, or firearms. Testing positive for drug use other than cocaine
did not affect the voucher program or have any other programmed consequence.
Key to the successful development of VBRT was demonstrating that it was efficacious when used by other investigators
and, even more importantly, demonstrating that it had efficacy with an inner-city population of cocaine abusers. The VBRT
studies by Higgins and colleagues were conducted in Burlington, Vermont, a small metropolitan area in a largely rural
state with an almost exclusively white population (Higgins et al. 1991, 1994). That patient population included a large
proportion of intranasal cocaine users (such users generally have a better prognosis). The seminal study extending VBRT
to the large, inner-city setting was a randomized, controlled trial conducted with 37 intravenous cocaine abusers enrolled
in methadone maintenance treatment for opiate dependence (Silverman et al. 1996). The schedule arrangement in the
experimental condition was largely the same as in the studies by Higgins et al. (1991, 1994), with patients assigned to 12
weeks of VBRT in which earning vouchers was contingent on cocaine abstinence. Those assigned to a noncontingent
control condition earned vouchers in an amount and pattern that was yoked to the experimental condition but delivered
independent of cocaine use. Those assigned to the abstinence-contingent voucher condition achieved significantly greater
cocaine abstinence compared with those assigned to the control condition—for example, 47% of patients assigned to
abstinence-contingent vouchers achieved between 7 and 12 weeks of continuous abstinence, compared with 0% in the
noncontingent voucher control condition. Only one patient (6%) assigned to the noncontingent control condition achieved
greater than 2 weeks of continuous cocaine abstinence. The results of this study provide compelling evidence supporting
the generality of earlier findings about VBRT to inner-city populations and methadone patients. Other VBRT trials
investigated the efficacy of VBRT in promoting abstinence from illicit opioid abuse (Silverman et al. 1996), demonstrated
that the use of opioids sometimes decreased along with cocaine use when CM explicitly targeted only cocaine abstinence
(Silverman et al. 1998), and supported the efficacy of increasing the magnitude of VBRT in order to promote a treatmentPrint: Chapter 27. Contingency Management http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=353782&print=yes…
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response in recalcitrant cocaine abusers (e.g., Silverman et al. 1999).
Interest in and research on VBRT as a treatment for SUDs grew considerably after the first publication on that form of CM,
extending use of the intervention to a wide range of different substances, populations, and settings. A meta-analysis by
Lussier et al. (2006) on VBRT identified more than 60 reports of controlled studies published in peer-reviewed journals
examining VBRT as a treatment for SUDs, with robust evidence supporting its efficacy. Figure 27–1 shows average effect
sizes for VBRT across different drugs targeted by the intervention as well as potential moderator variables. No significant
differences were noted between the different types of drug abuse targeted, although a clear trend toward smaller effect
sizes when targeting multiple substances is discernible. The only drug for which the 95% confidence intervals overlapped
with zero (suggesting no significant treatment effect) was alcohol, on which there was only a single study and thus larger
variance. Analyses of potential moderator variables indicated that greater monetary value of potential daily earnings and
immediate (same-day) versus delayed delivery of the voucher were associated with larger treatment effects.
FIGURE 27–1. Estimated effect size (r) and 95% confidence intervals.
Weighted average effect sizes and 95% confidence intervals for subsets of studies as a function of the moderator variables: target,
control condition, duration, daily earnings, voucher-based reinforcement therapy (VBRT) delivery immediacy, setting, and study
quality. All studies target abstinence (N = 30). Weighted average effect sizes are represented by closed diamonds and 95% confidence
intervals by solid lines. Where confidence intervals do not overlap, differences between subsets of studies are significantly different at
the 0.05 level.
Source. Reprinted from Lussier JP, Heil SH, Mongeon JA, et al: “A Meta-Analysis of Voucher-Based Reinforcement Therapy for
Substance Use Disorders.” Addiction 101:192–203, 2006. Used with permission.Print: Chapter 27. Contingency Management http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=353782&print=yes…
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Building upon the success of VBRT in reducing cocaine abuse among cocaine-dependent methadone patients, other studies
were conducted demonstrating efficacy in reducing illicit opiate abuse in this population. In one such study, 120
methadone patients who continued to abuse heroin were randomly assigned to receive a methadone dose increase,
abstinence-contingent vouchers (maximum earnings of $554 in 8 weeks), a combination of the methadone dose increase
with abstinence-contingent vouchers, or continued treatment with a standard intervention technique. Contingent vouchers
increased opiate abstinence significantly above the standard intervention, whereas the methadone dose increase did not.
The combination treatment was equal to the vouchers-only condition, suggesting that it was the vouchers that produced
the increases in abstinence (Preston et al. 2000).
Other drugs of abuse
As illustrated in Figure 27–1, VBRT has been extended to a broad range of different SUDs. For illustration purposes, we
discuss here the extension to marijuana use disorders. Some thought CM would not be feasible in treating marijuana
abuse because of the long half-life of tetrahydrocannabinol, which might be expected to result in too long a delay in being
able to deliver contingent reinforcement for abstinence. Such concerns notwithstanding, VBRT has been successfully
extended to outpatient treatment of marijuana dependence. For example, a study examining the addition of VBRT to a
treatment of motivational enhancement and coping skills therapy increased end-of-treatment abstinence more than
threefold compared with the motivational enhancement therapy alone or motivational therapy plus coping skills (Budney
et al. 2000).
Fishbowl Procedure
Petry et al. (2000) developed a variation of VBRT designed to lower cost without losing efficacy. In this procedure, rather
than having each occurrence of the target response reinforced, patients earned the opportunity to draw from a fishbowl
that contained vouchers of varying value, including many that were of zero value but offered verbal praise, some that
were of relatively low monetary value (e.g., $1), still fewer of moderate value ($20), and a very few worth high monetary
value ($100). Instead of exchanging these vouchers for the opportunity to make retail purchases in the community,
patients chose among prize items already available at the clinic. Importantly, this modified arrangement has been
demonstrated to be efficacious for increasing cocaine and opioid abstinence in drug-free and methadone community
clinics; however, there is no evidence that this more complex schedule arrangement results in better outcomes than the
more conventional voucher program that uses vouchers of lower value. In the only direct comparison of the fishbowl and
conventional voucher programs offered at comparable values, both methods improved outcomes above a control condition
and there was no significant difference between the fishbowl and conventional voucher programs (Petry et al. 2005a).
Thus the important contributions of this development are that it is less costly than the original VBRT intervention and it is
efficacious, giving it a better likelihood than more expensive arrangements of being adopted by community clinics where
cost concerns are an important priority. The likelihood of its increased use seems certain given the results obtained in two
multisite trials conducted in community clinics as part of the National Institute on Drug Abuse Clinical Trials Network, in
which the procedure was shown to improve outcomes of stimulant abusers enrolled in drug-free and methadone clinics
(Peirce et al. 2006; Petry et al. 2005b). There is no evidence that lowering costs with this fishbowl arrangement gets
around the relationship between treatment effect size and reinforcement magnitude in VBRT interventions. Indeed, as
expected, effect sizes obtained with the fishbowl intervention appear to be smaller than those achieved with more
expensive VBRT interventions in comparable populations (Lussier et al. 2006).
Treating Special Populations
Identifying effective treatments for special populations of individuals with SUDs is an important challenge, and another
important development of VBRT is its extension to the treatment of such populations (for a review, see Higgins et al.
2008). The application of VBRT in treating pregnant smokers provides an excellent example of this extension of VBRT.
Maternal cigarette smoking is a leading preventable cause of poor pregnancy outcome and pediatric morbidity. Effective
interventions for promoting smoking cessation among pregnant women are available, but only about 15% of women who
receive them actually quit smoking. Controlled trials indicated that VBRT could increase quit rates to more than 30%. In
one of these trials, VBRT was studied with 58 women who were still smoking upon entering prenatal care and were
assigned to either contingent or noncontingent voucher conditions (Higgins et al. 2004b). In the contingent condition,
vouchers were earned for biochemically verified smoking abstinence; in the noncontingent condition, vouchers were
earned independent of smoking status. Contingent vouchers significantly increased abstinence at the end of pregnancy
(37% vs. 9%) and at 12-week postpartum (33% vs. 0%) assessments. The effect of contingent vouchers remained
significant at the 24-week postpartum assessment (27% vs. 0%), which was 12 weeks after discontinuation of the
voucher program. The magnitude of these treatment effects exceeds levels typically observed with pregnant and
postpartum smokers, and the maintenance of effects through 24 weeks postpartum exceeds previously reported
durations.
Another example of this important direction is a study by Krishnan-Sarin et al. (2008) using VBRT to promote smoking
cessation among adolescents. Twenty-eight adolescent smokers participated in a 1-month, school-based smoking
cessation program in which they were randomly assigned to receive either cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) alone or CM
combined with weekly CBT. In the CM plus CBT group, biochemical verification of abstinence was obtained twice daily
during the first 2 weeks, followed by daily appointments during the third week and appointments once every other day
during the fourth week. Participants earned monetary reinforcement contingent on abstinence. At the end of weeks 1 and
4 , abstinence verified using quantitative urine cotinine levels was higher in participants in the CM plus CBT group (week
1: 76.7%; week 4: 53.0%) compared to CBT alone (week 1: 7.2%; week 4: 0%).Print: Chapter 27. Contingency Management http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=353782&print=yes…
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IMPROVING CM INTERVENTIONS: INITIAL TREATMENT RESPONSE AND LONGER-TERM
OUTCOMES
While the treatment effects obtained with CM are impressive, often 50% of patients treated or more do not have positive
outcomes. The 10-point list earlier in this chapter (in the section titled “Basic Elements of CM”) represents what is known
about how to increase treatment response. Using a higher magnitude of reinforcement, minimizing delay in reinforcement
delivery, targeting one response rather than multiple responses, and monitoring abstinence more frequently are all
associated with larger treatment effects (Lussier et al. 2006). The parameter for which there is the greatest amount of
evidence, including experimental evidence and results from meta-analyses, is reinforcement magnitude (e.g., Higgins et
- 2007; Silverman et al. 1999).
Regarding longer-term outcomes, several studies have shown that VBRT effects on abstinence sometimes last for as long
as 21 months following discontinuation of the intervention (e.g., Higgins et al. 2007). However, many patients exposed to
VBRT or other CM interventions resume drug use following discontinuation of the intervention. Identifying ways to sustain
treatment effects over time is a priority with CM just as it is with virtually all treatments for SUDs. A number of trials have
investigated combining VBRT with relapse prevention therapy, but there is no evidence that this combination extends
treatment effects beyond those obtained with VBRT alone (Rawson et al. 2002).
Another avenue that is being pursued is to use VBRT to increase the proportion of patients who achieve a sustained period
of abstinence during treatment. This approach grew out of observations in studies where VBRT effects were sustained
during posttreatment follow-up as compared with control treatments. In those studies the probability of posttreatment
abstinence during follow-up increased as a function of the duration of continuous abstinence achieved during treatment to
a comparable extent in the VBRT and control treatments (e.g., Higgins et al. 2007).
Knowing that greater reinforcement magnitude produces larger effects during the treatment period, Higgins et al. (2007)
conducted a randomized clinical trial to see if posttreatment outcomes could be increased as well by increasing
reinforcement magnitude. In this study, 100 cocaine-dependent adults were randomly assigned to receive treatment
based on CRA plus VBRT set at a relatively high monetary value (maximal value = $1,995/12 weeks) or CRA with VBRT set
at a relatively low monetary value (maximal value = $499/12 weeks). The high-value vouchers were used to test the
concept and not with the idea that they would have direct practical application. Earning vouchers was contingent on
cocaine-negative urinalysis results during the initial 12 weeks of the 24-week outpatient treatment. It was found that
increasing voucher value significantly increased the duration of continuous cocaine abstinence achieved during treatment
and, as hypothesized, point-prevalence cocaine abstinence assessed every 3 months throughout an 18-month
posttreatment follow-up period was greater in the high-value than in the low-value voucher condition (Figure 27–2). As in
prior studies, the duration of abstinence achieved during treatment predicted posttreatment abstinence, although that
relationship weakened over time. Overall, increasing the value of abstinence-contingent incentives during the initial 12
weeks of treatment represented an effective method for increasing during-treatment and longer-term cocaine abstinence,
although the positive association of during-treatment abstinence with longer-term outcome dissipated over time. This is a
research avenue that will continue to be evaluated.
FIGURE 27–2. Periodic abstinence assessments.Print: Chapter 27. Contingency Management http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=353782&print=yes…
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Percentages of participants abstinent at each of the periodic assessments conducted with subjects retained in treatment as well as
dropouts. Data points represent point-prevalence abstinence at the respective assessments. Abstinence was defined as a self-report of
no cocaine use in the past 30 days and cocaine-negative urinalysis results. In categorical modeling, abstinence levels were
significantly higher in the high-value than low-value voucher conditions based on assessments during treatment (1.5 and 3.0 months,
P = 0.02) and follow-up (6- through 24-month assessments, P = 0.04).
Source. Reprinted from Higgins ST, Heil SH, Dantona R, et al: “Effects of Varying the Monetary Value of Voucher-Based Incentives on
Abstinence Achieved During and Following Treatment Among Cocaine-Dependent Outpatients.” Addiction 102:271–281, 2007. Used
with permission.
Silverman et al. (2004) conducted a seminal study examining the use of VBRT as a maintenance intervention. This study
examined whether long-term abstinence reinforcement could maintain cocaine abstinence throughout a 1-year period.
Patients who injected drugs and used cocaine during methadone treatment (N = 78) were randomly assigned to one of
two abstinence-reinforcement groups or to a usual-care control group. Participants in the two abstinence-reinforcement
groups could earn take-home methadone doses for providing opiate- and cocaine-free urine samples; participants in one
of those groups also could earn $5,800 in vouchers for providing cocaine-free urine samples over 52 weeks. Both
abstinence-reinforcement interventions increased cocaine abstinence, but the addition of the voucher intervention
resulted in the largest and most sustained abstinence (Figure 27–3). Indeed, patients in the condition with take-homes
and VBRT who achieved a period of continuous cocaine abstinence often sustained it through the duration of the voucher
program and beyond. Patients in the other treatment conditions rarely achieved comparable levels of sustained
abstinence. The study provided proof of concept that VBRT could be a highly effective maintenance intervention for
cocaine abstinence in methadone patients.
FIGURE 27–3. Cocaine urinalysis results across consecutive urine samples for individual participants in each of the three
experimental conditions.Print: Chapter 27. Contingency Management http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=353782&print=yes…
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Top, middle, and bottom panels represent data for the take-home plus voucher, take-home only, and usual-care control conditions.
The vertical dashed lines divide each panel into three periods, the baseline (left), the intervention (center), and the postintervention
(right) periods. Within each panel, horizontal lines represent the cocaine urinalysis results for individual participants across the
consecutive scheduled urine collections of the study. The heavy portion of each line represents cocaine-negative urinalysis results, the
thin portions of each line represent cocaine-positive urinalysis results, and the blank portions represent missing urine samples. Within
each panel, participants are arranged from those showing the least abstinence (fewest cocaine-negative urines) on the bottom of thePrint: Chapter 27. Contingency Management http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=353782&print=yes…
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panel to participants with the most abstinence on the top. The numerals on the ordinates represent participant identification numbers.
Source. Reprinted from Silverman K, Robles E, Mudric T, et al: “A Randomized Trial of Long-Term Reinforcement of Cocaine Abstinence
in Methadone-Maintained Patients Who Inject Drugs.” Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 72:839–854, 2004. Used with
permission.
DISSEMINATION: COMMUNITY DRUG ABUSE TREATMENT PROGRAMS
Cost is an important obstacle when considering dissemination of CM into community substance abuse treatment clinics
and there have been encouraging developments in this area. The positive outcomes obtained in the multisite trials using
the fishbowl procedure are quite promising and are likely to facilitate successful dissemination (Peirce et al. 2006; Petry
et al. 2005b). The New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation, the largest provider of public treatment for substance
abuse in New York City, launched low-cost CM programs in five of its community substance abuse treatment clinics that
were supported through public funds (Kellogg et al. 2005). In an initiative that received broad media coverage (e.g.,
Ornstein 2005), the San Francisco Department of Public Health established a VBRT program for gay and bisexual
methamphetamine abusers.
Another strategy is to integrate existing community services into CM arrangements. Two programs offer exciting
examples of how this can be done effectively. One is a program for patients with SUDs and serious mental illness where
the CM program is built around patients’ Social Security disability benefits (Ries et al. 2004). The clinic serves as the
designated payee and patients gain progressively greater control over the use of those benefits contingent on verified
abstinence from drug use.
Another exciting program is being conducted as part of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Compensated Work
Therapy program, which provides veterans with chronic employment problems access to paid training and supported paid
employment. Perhaps not surprisingly, SUDs are an important problem in these programs. Drebing et al. (2005) have
demonstrated how VBRT can be used to increase abstinence and job-seeking and job placement activities in that setting.
Workplaces offer important opportunities to arrange abstinence reinforcement opportunities because of the resources that
they control in the form of wages and benefits. Silverman et al. (2002) developed a model referred to as the therapeutic
workplace that is designed to treat chronically unemployed adults. This program has been evaluated with pregnant and
recently postpartum women who were continuing to abuse cocaine and heroin despite being enrolled in methadone
treatment. Forty women were randomly assigned either to the therapeutic workplace or to usual care. For those assigned
to the therapeutic workplace, daily entry into the work setting was contingent on verified abstinence from cocaine and
opiate use and once in the program they earned vouchers contingent on job performance. The intervention was in place
for several years, with significantly more women in the workplace abstinent from cocaine and opiates than in usual care
(30% vs. 5%) during year 3 (Silverman et al. 2002).
The emergence of the U.S. drug court system holds tremendous promise for the successful dissemination of CM into
mainstream rehabilitation for SUDs (see Marlowe and Wong 2008). Drug courts are themselves an explicit CM program
wherein reinforcers and punishers, termed incentives and sanctions within the drug court literature, are used to
systematically leverage nonviolent criminals with SUDs to obtain the treatment that they need. It is difficult to imagine a
better setting in which to successfully disseminate CM practices.
CONCLUSION
CM treatments have developed in many exciting directions during the past two decades and represent an important part of
evidence-based treatments for SUDs. The varied CM applications outlined in this chapter demonstrate the relevance of
basic principles of behavioral science to the treatment of SUDs, the striking effectiveness and versatility of CM
interventions, and the feasibility of disseminating these interventions in society, both through community treatment
clinics and through other settings, such as workplaces, the Veterans Affairs hospital system, and drug courts. Despite the
promise of CM interventions suggested in this extensive body of research, the research reviewed in this chapter also
shows that more work is needed in order to find ways to increase the effectiveness of the interventions so that they will
succeed with even more patients, to develop methods that will ensure longer-term maintenance of beneficial effects over
time, and to continue to develop and refine practical applications that will be used widely in society. Thus, this chapter
outlines the impressive effectiveness and promise of CM interventions as well as the areas where additional research and
more development are needed.
As is amply shown in the research reviewed in this chapter, CM interventions are not a bag of arbitrary tricks but an
orderly set of procedures that are based on fundamental principles of behavioral science. As such, the further
improvement and development of these procedures can be guided by the basic scientific principles on which the
interventions are based. The broad success the field has achieved to date in applying these basic principles to treat SUDs
across populations, drugs, and settings should give great confidence that we can continue to develop and improve CM
interventions to address the costly and devastating consequences of SUDs.
KEY POINTS
Contingency management (CM) is based on an extensive basic science literature that demonstrates an important role for operant
conditioning in the genesis and maintenance of drug use.
CM is an efficacious intervention for a wide range of different types of substance abuse disorders and populations.
CM has some basic features outlined in the section “Basic Elements of CM” that are important to effective implementation.Print: Chapter 27. Contingency Management http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=353782&print=yes…
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SUGGESTED READING
Higgins ST, Silverman K, Heil SH (eds): Contingency Management in the Treatment of Substance Use Disorders. New York, Guilford,
2008
Copyright © 2008 American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Course Content
Introduction to Contingency Management
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Understanding Contingency Management
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Historical Context and Development
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Basic Components of Contingency Management
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Introduction to Contingency Management Quiz
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Ethical Considerations in Contingency Management
Foundations of Behavioral Theory and Analysis
Techniques and Strategies in Contingency Management
Implementing Contingency Management in Practice
Evaluating and Adapting Contingency Management Plans
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