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PAMI

PAMI. Promoting Awareness of Motivational Incentives: Focus on Founding Principles and an Implementation Checklist. Donald A Calsyn, Ph.D. Pacific Northwest Node, NIDA Clinical Trials Network Alcohol & Drug Abuse Institute University of Washington. Course Content. • Founding Principles

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PAMI

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  1. PAMI Promoting Awareness of Motivational Incentives:Focus on Founding Principles and anImplementation Checklist Donald A Calsyn, Ph.D. Pacific Northwest Node, NIDA Clinical Trials Network Alcohol & Drug Abuse Institute University of Washington

  2. Course Content • Founding Principles • Challenges • Clinical Applications

  3. Founding Principles • Identify the Target Behavior • Choice of the Target Population • Choice of the Reinforcer/Incentive • Incentive Magnitude • Frequency of Incentive Distribution • Timing of the Incentive • Consistency in Providing Incentives • Duration of Intervention

  4. Identify the Target Behavior • Target behavior is something in need of change • Must be objectively observable & measureable • Must be reasonably obtainable • Examples: urines, attendance, goal obtainment steps

  5. Choice of Target Population • May not be feasible or necessary to target everyone • Target only those groups or individuals where the target behavior is a problem • Examples: new patients, non-responders, special populations, users of a specific drug

  6. Choice of Reinforcer • Reinforcer must be desirable • Types traditionally utilized • Clinic privileges • Vouchers – point systems • Prizes • Refunds • Housing • Employment

  7. Incentive Magnitude • Chose a reinforcer that can compete with reinforcement derived from target behavior • In general the greater the magnitude the more effective is the reinforcer • However, low magnitude reinforcers have been effective

  8. Frequency of Incentive Distribution • Options • Reinforce every time target behavior occurs • Reinforce intermittently • Reinforce within a set schedule • The schedule of reinforcement and contingency link must be clearly stated

  9. Timing of the Incentive • Immediacy is crucial. • Best to have the reinforcer follow the target behavior very closely

  10. Consistency in Providing the Incentive • Reinfocers need to be provided consistently across targeted patients • Monitoring systems are needed to ensure this happens

  11. Duration of the Intervention • How long dose the incentive program remain in force? • For long term recovery to occur patients need to internalize the process • Recovery needs to become reinforcing

  12. Additional Considerations • Successive approximations • If the target behavior is unlikely to occur naturally, may need to reinforce behaviors that approach the target • Priming • May need to provide the reinforcer before target behavior performed so patient can become familiar with getting reinforced • Escalating reinforcers and bonuses

  13. Course Content • Founding Principles • Challenges • Clinical Applications

  14. Challenges • Cost of incentives • On-site testing • Counselor resistance

  15. Challenges • Is it fair? • Does this lead to gambling addiction?

  16. Challenges • Isn’t this just rewarding patients for what they should be doing anyway?

  17. Challenges • How do I select the rewards? • Can Motivational Incentives be used with adolescents, or patients with co-occurring disorders?

  18. Emerging Adulthood Pilot Study Survey:Sample Characteristic • CTP n Triumph 77 Residence-12 76 Evergreen Manor 248 • Age 18-25 80 (20.0%) >25 308 (76.8%) • Gender Female 219 (54.6%) Male 173 (43.1%)

  19. Gift Card/Cash Preferences of Clients from 3 PNW Node CTPs *p < .05

  20. Gift Card/Cash Preferences of Clients from 3 PNW Node CTPs *

  21. Services/Assistance Preferences of Clients from 3 PNW Node CTPs

  22. Services/Assistance Preferences of Clients from 3 PNW Node CTPs

  23. Reward Schedule Preferences for Clients from 3 PNW Node CTPs

  24. Course Content • Founding Principles • Low Cost Incentives • Clinical Applications

  25. Nancy Petry Checklist-I • Identify target behavior • Something you want to change • Frequently occurring • Reasonably achieved by the patients • Indicate how behavior will be objectively measured

  26. Nancy Petry Checklist-II • Chose a reinforcer Needs to be desired Needs to be of sufficient magnitude • Is it readily available? Clinic privileges • If there is a cost how will you pay for them?

  27. Nancy Petry Checklist-III • Use behavioral principles to establish the reinforcement schedule How frequently will behavior be monitored? How frequently will behavior be reinforced? Honor the immediacy principle Will successive approximations or priming be needed Will an escalating schedule or bonuses be used • Keep it simple Patients and staff need to be able to understand and follow the system

  28. Nancy Petry Checklist-IV • Write out the behavioral contract • Clarity is essential • Be very specific • Everyone needs to be on the same page • Check for loopholes • Identify any time limits

  29. Nancy Petry Checklist-V • Spell out implementation procedures • How will the program be monitored? • Consistency is essential • Reminders to both staff and patients can be very helpful

  30. Nancy Petry Checklist-VI • Plan for the future • Review how the program functioned • What seem to work • What obstacles were unanticipated • What was the patient response • What new behaviors are to be targeted • What changes will be implemented based on what was learned

  31. Contingency management worksheet: Current Procedures

  32. Contingency management worksheet: Current Procedures

  33. Resources • www.drugabuse.gov • www.ATTCnetwork.org/PAMI • www.samhsa.gov • www.csat.samhsa.gov • www.ATTCnetwork.org

  34. Social Reinforcement: Lash et al. 2004 • Participants: 28 day Inpatient TX completers • A-B design, Aftercare was either • Standard or Standard + Social Reinforcement • Standard • Written aftercare contract & attendance prompts • Social Reinforcement • Group therapist special recognition session 1 • Certificate at 6th group & name on honor roll • Medallion at 8th group

  35. Social Reinforcement: Lash et al. 2004 Χ2=6.7, p=.010 Χ2=4.0, p=.047

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