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Contingency Management for Drug Use Disorders: Meta-Analysis and Application of Tolin's Criteria.

Rory A PfundMeredith K GinleyCassandra L BonessCarla J RashKristyn ZajacKatie Witkiewitz
Published in: Clinical psychology : a publication of the Division of Clinical Psychology of the American Psychological Association (2022)
Several professional organizations and federal agencies recommend contingency management (CM) as an empirically supported treatment for drug use disorder. However, the release of the "Tolin criteria" warrants an updated recommendation. Using this methodology, five meta-analyses (84 studies, 11,000 participants) were reviewed. Two meta-analyses were rated moderate quality, and three were rated low or critically low quality. Comparator conditions included active treatment, placebo, treatment as usual, and no treatment. The primary outcome was abstinence. Considering only the moderate quality meta-analyses, the effect of CM versus control on posttreatment abstinence was d = 0.54 [0.43, 0.64] and follow-up abstinence was d =0.08 [0.00, 0.16]. A "strong" recommendation was provided for CM as an empirically supported treatment for drug use disorder.
Keyphrases
  • meta analyses
  • systematic review
  • randomized controlled trial
  • clinical trial
  • smoking cessation
  • high intensity
  • study protocol
  • case control
  • double blind