Background and Objective: Substance use disorders (SUD) remain a major public health concern and represent a significant cause of morbidity and mortality. Given the growing need for society to address this issue of SUD, it is essential to identify effective solutions to the problems this crisis poses to people's lives, health, and socioeconomic well-being. These social welfare issues are particularly affecting minority populations, who face disproportionately high levels of marginalization and disparities in healthcare.
Aim: The goal of this study is to
explore and determine the effects of employment-based contingency (EBC) on
enrolling SUD individuals into treatment, the rate of treatment adherence, and
the rate of post-treatment abstinence.
Methods: PubMed and Google Scholar
search was conducted using the search terms ((substance use disorder) AND
(unemployment)) OR (therapeutic workplace)), for randomized controlled trials
(RCT) published between 2012 and 2022, reporting on participants between ages
18 and 65 years who use opioids, cocaine or alcohol.
Results: Seven RCTs met the inclusion
criteria, with a total of 389 participants. Three RCTs involving 203
participants found that EBC positively impacted treatment enrollment rates,
with 100%, 92%, and 100% enrollment in the respective studies. Three articles involving
172 participants found a higher rate of treatment adherence and retention to
treatment among EBC participants compared to the control group. There was more
naltrexone-positive urine in the EBC group compared to control (72% vs. 21%,
with a p-value of .01), and 74% (EBC) vs 26% (control) participants completed
treatment. Four articles with 238 participants found that EBC improved the rate
of abstinence by over 50%, which is double the rate among the control group
without EBC. However, in three articles with 204 participants, EBC participants
and control groups exhibited an equal rate of drug abstinence during the
post-intervention period, further suggesting no significant difference in the
rate of abstinence between the groups.
Conclusion: EBC is effective in
improving SUD treatment enrollment, treatment adherence, and post-treatment
abstinence, however, the efficacy may vary depending on how much is earned as
an incentive. This policy is likely to be more successful with the strong
support of employers in both the private and public sectors and the provision
of support such as funding for businesses willing to implement these measures
in their workplace for individuals with SUD.
Author (s) Details
Nkechinyere Mary Harry
Vinnytsia National Pirogov Medical
University, Vinnytsia Oblast, Ukraine.
Ibrahim Folorunsho
Badr Al Janoub Hospital, Najran, Saudi
Arabia.
Nnenna Okafor
College of Medicine, All Saints
University, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.
Oluwatosin Arubuolawe
Obafemi Awolowo College of Health
Sciences, Olabisi Onabanjo University, Nigeria.
Gibson Anugwom
Menninger Department of Psychiatry and
Behavioral Sciences, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA.
Please see the book here:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/dhrni/v4/1757
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