Contingent vouchers and motivational interviewing for cigarette smokers in residential substance abuse treatment.

Category Primary study
JournalJournal of substance abuse treatment
Year 2015
Loading references information
Residential drug treatment provides an opportunity to intervene with smokers with substance use disorders (SUD). A randomized controlled clinical trial compared: (1) contingent vouchers (CV) for smoking abstinence to noncontingent vouchers (NCV), crossed with (2) motivational interviewing (MI) or brief advice (BA), for 184 smokers in SUD treatment. During the voucher period, 36% of carbon monoxide readings indicated smoking abstinence for those receiving CV versus 13% with NCV (p < .001). Post-treatment (3–9 months) point-prevalence abstinence rates were low (3–4% at each follow up), with more abstinence when CV was combined with MI (6.6% on average) than with BA (0% on average). No differential effects on drug use or motivation to quit smoking occurred. Thus, CV had limited effects on long-term smoking abstinence in this population but effects were improved when CV was combined with MI. More effective methods are needed to increase motivation to quit smoking and quit rates in this high-risk population. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved)
Epistemonikos ID: 3f026e3367bdbb1ec42c52e4874c7b732ffc437c
First added on: Dec 11, 2018