Searched for: person:rotroj01 or bogenm02 or hanseh03 or lewisc12 or Sarah Mennenga or rosss01 or kc16
Community Reinforcement and Family Training: a pilot comparison of group and self-directed delivery
Manuel, Jennifer K; Austin, Julia L; Miller, William R; McCrady, Barbara S; Tonigan, J Scott; Meyers, Robert J; Smith, Jane Ellen; Bogenschutz, Michael P
In a randomized clinical pilot study, 40 concerned significant others (CSOs) of treatment-refusing alcohol- and drug-using individuals were randomized to either Community Reinforcement and Family Training (CRAFT) conducted in a group format (Group CRAFT) or a Self-Directed CRAFT condition. Although results indicated no significant between-group difference in engaging treatment-refusing substance-using individuals (referred to as identified patients or IPs) into treatment, the engagement rate in Group CRAFT was similar to rates previously reported with individual CRAFT. For the intent-to-treat analysis, 60% of Group CRAFT CSOs engaged their loved one into treatment, as compared with 40% in Self-Directed CRAFT. Of CSOs in the Group condition who received at least one session of group therapy, 71% engaged their IP into treatment. CSOs in both conditions reported improvements in family cohesion and conflict at the 3- and 6-month follow-up, replicating prior CRAFT findings.
PMCID:3331969
PMID: 22154038
ISSN: 0740-5472
CID: 1478092
Pharmacy staff characteristics associated with support for pharmacy-based HIV testing
Amesty, Silvia; Blaney, Shannon; Crawford, Natalie D; Rivera, Alexis V; Fuller, Crystal
OBJECTIVES: To determine support of in-pharmacy human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) testing among pharmacy staff and the individual-level characteristics associated with in-pharmacy HIV testing support. DESIGN: Descriptive, nonexperimental, cross-sectional study. SETTING: New York City (NYC) from January 2008 to March 2009. PARTICIPANTS: 480 pharmacy staff, including pharmacists, owners/managers, and technicians/clerks. INTERVENTION: 131 pharmacies registered in the Expanded Syringe Access Program (ESAP) completed a survey. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Support of in-pharmacy HIV testing. RESULTS: Support of in-pharmacy HIV testing is high among pharmacy staff (79.4%). Pharmacy staff who supported in-pharmacy vaccinations were significantly more likely to support in-pharmacy HIV testing. Pharmacy staff who thought that selling syringes to injection drug users (IDUs) caused the community to be littered with dirty syringes were significantly less likely to support in-pharmacy HIV testing. CONCLUSION: Support for in-pharmacy HIV testing was high among our sample of ESAP pharmacy staff actively involved in nonprescription syringe sales. These findings suggest that active ESAP pharmacy staff may be amenable to providing HIV counseling and testing to IDUs and warrants further investigation.
PMCID:3703741
PMID: 22825227
ISSN: 1544-3450
CID: 1535642
Serotonergic hallucinogens and emerging targets for addiction pharmacotherapies
Ross, Stephen
PMID: 22640760
ISSN: 0193-953X
CID: 167803
Effects of protein kinase A inhibitor and activator on rewarding effects of SKF-82958 microinjected into nucleus accumbens shell of ad libitum fed and food-restricted rats
de Vaca, Soledad Cabeza; Peng, Xing-Xiang; Concors, Seth; Farin, Casey; Lascu, Elena; Carr, Kenneth D
RATIONALE: Previous studies indicate that the rewarding effect of D-1 dopamine receptor stimulation in nucleus accumbens (NAc) shell is greater in food-restricted (FR) than in ad libitum fed (AL) rats. The D-1 receptor is positively coupled to adenylyl cyclase and activates protein kinase A (PKA). OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to determine whether PKA is involved in the rewarding effect of D-1 receptor stimulation and, if so, whether it is involved in the enhanced response of FR rats. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Rats were stereotaxically implanted with microinjection cannulae in NAc shell and a stimulating electrode in lateral hypothalamus. The rewarding effects of SKF-82958 (1.5 or 3.0 mug, bilaterally) in the presence and absence of PKA inhibitor, Rp-cAMPS (8.9 mug), and PKA activator, Sp-cAMPS (8.9 mug), were assessed using the curve-shift method of intracranial self-stimulation (ICSS). Basal NAc levels of DARPP-32 phosphorylated on Thr34 and Thr75 were measured. RESULTS: Rp-cAMPS increased the rewarding effect of SKF-82958 in AL but not FR rats, doubling the ICSS threshold-lowering effect of the 3.0-mug dose. Sp-cAMPS decreased the rewarding effect of SKF-82958 in FR but not AL rats. Levels of phospho-DARPP-32 (Thr75), which inhibits PKA, were higher in FR than AL rats. CONCLUSIONS: Results indicate that inhibition of PKA enhances the unconditioned rewarding effect of D-1 receptor stimulation and that decreased PKA may be involved in the effect of FR on drug reward. Evidence for involvement of D-2 receptor-expressing neurons in the enhancing effect of PKA inhibition is discussed.
PMCID:3310955
PMID: 22143580
ISSN: 0033-3158
CID: 167794
Hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus services offered by substance abuse treatment programs in the United States
Bini, Edmund J; Kritz, Steven; Brown, Lawrence S Jr; Robinson, Jim; Calsyn, Donald; Alderson, Don; Tracy, Kathlene; McAuliffe, Patrick; Smith, Cheryl; Rotrosen, John
Although substance abuse treatment programs are important contact points for providing health services for hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections, availability of services in these programs has not been well characterized. This study evaluated the spectrum of HBV and HCV services offered by substance abuse treatment programs within the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network. Our survey of substance abuse treatment program administrators covered availability of testing for HBV and HCV; hepatitis A virus (HAV) and HBV immunization; and HCV medical and nonmedical services. There were also questions covering clarity of guidelines for HBV and HCV testing and HAV and HBV immunization. Differences between methadone and nonmethadone programs were examined. Despite the importance of substance abuse in sustaining the hepatitis epidemics, few programs offer comprehensive HBV and HCV testing or HCV health care services. Interventions to improve access to hepatitis services for substance-abusing patients are needed.
PMCID:3272317
PMID: 22035702
ISSN: 0740-5472
CID: 166497
Therapeutic mechanisms of classic hallucinogens in the treatment of addictions: from indirect evidence to testable hypotheses
Bogenschutz, Michael P; Pommy, Jessica M
Alcohol and drug addiction are major public health problems, and existing treatments are only moderately effective. Although there has been interest for over half a century in the therapeutic use of classic hallucinogens to treat addictions, clinical research with these drugs was halted at an early stage in the early 1970s, leaving many fundamental questions unanswered. In the past two decades, clinical research on classic hallucinogens has resumed, although addiction treatment trials are only now beginning. The purpose of this paper is to provide a targeted review of the research most relevant to the therapeutic potential of hallucinogens, and to integrate this information with current thinking about addiction and recovery. On the basis of this information, we present a heuristic model which organizes a number of hypotheses that may be tested in future research. We conclude that existing evidence provides a convincing rationale for further research on the effects of classic hallucinogens in the treatment of addiction.
PMID: 22761106
ISSN: 1942-7611
CID: 1478062
Health status of ayahuasca users
Barbosa, Paulo Cesar Ribeiro; Mizumoto, Suely; Bogenschutz, Michael P; Strassman, Rick J
Ayahuasca is a psychedelic brew originally used for magico-religious purposes by Amerindian populations of the western Amazon Basin. Throughout the last four decades, the use of ayahuasca spread towards major cities in all regions of Brazil and abroad. This trend has raised concerns that regular use of this N,N-dimethyltryptamine- and harmala-alkaloid-containing tea may lead to mental and physical health problems associated typically with drug abuse. To further elucidate the mental and physical health of ayahuasca users, we conducted a literature search in the international medical PubMed database. Inclusion criteria were evaluation of any related effect of ayahuasca use that occurred after the resolution of acute effects of the brew. Fifteen publications were related to emotional, cognitive, and physical health of ayahuasca users. The accumulated data suggest that ayahuasca use is safe and may even be, under certain conditions, beneficial. However, methodological bias of the reviewed studies might have contributed to the preponderance of beneficial effects and to the few adverse effects reported. The data up to now do not appear to allow for definitive conclusions to be drawn on the effects of ayahuasca use on mental and physical health, but some studies point in the direction of beneficial effects. Additional studies are suggested to provide further clarification.
PMID: 22761152
ISSN: 1942-7611
CID: 1478052
The "new masculinity": Addiction treatment as a reconstruction of gender in Puerto Rican evangelist street ministries
Hansen H
This article, based on ethnographic fieldwork including twelve months of participant observation and 428 interviews with 84 converts and leaders in Pentecostal ministries founded and run by former addicts in Puerto Rico, describes redefined masculinity as a treatment for addiction. Industrial disinvestment and resulting unemployment and drug trade in urban North and Latin America have led to narcotic addiction among Latino and African American men and attendant homicide, infection, and incarceration. Pentecostal-evangelical street ministries are prevalent in these regions. Their alternative vision of masculine honor and power addresses a cultural crisis of men's social space. They replace the unachievable ideal of the male breadwinner with an image of male spiritual power. In place of the violence of the drug trade, they cultivate male domesticity and responsibility for the home. In place of a deleterious drug economy, they offer the social and cultural capital of ministry networks and biblical knowledge. Yet the trajectories of ministry converts reveal the limits, as well as the promise, of evangelist masculinity as a treatment for addiction. In the course of building leadership among their converts, the ministries create their own, internal hierarchies, fall short of the spiritual democracy they espouse, and lead to relapse among those left at the bottom
PMCID:3241954
PMID: 21911274
ISSN: 1873-5347
CID: 139930
A preliminary study of the effects of individual patient-level feedback in outpatient substance abuse treatment programs
Crits-Christoph, Paul; Ring-Kurtz, Sarah; Hamilton, Jessica L; Lambert, Michael J; Gallop, Robert; McClure, Bridget; Kulaga, Agatha; Rotrosen, John
The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of feedback provided to counselors on the outcomes of patients treated at community-based substance abuse treatment programs. A version of the Outcome Questionnaire (OQ-45), adapted to include drug and alcohol use, was administered to patients (N = 304) in 3 substance abuse treatment clinics. Phase I of the study consisted only of administration of the assessment instruments. Phase II consisted of providing feedback reports to counselors based on the adapted OQ-45 at every treatment session up to Session 12. Patients who were found to not be progressing at an expectable rate (i.e., "offtrack") were administered a questionnaire that was used as a second feedback report for counselors. For offtrack patients, feedback compared with no feedback led to significant linear reductions in alcohol use throughout treatment and also in OQ-45 total scores and drug use from the point of the second feedback instrument to Session 12. The effect for improving mental health functioning was evident at only 1 of the 3 clinics. These results suggest that a feedback system adapted to the treatment of substance use problems is a promising approach that should be tested in a larger randomized trial.
PMCID:3270209
PMID: 22036697
ISSN: 0740-5472
CID: 165429
Perturbation of the Glutamate-Glutamine System in Alcohol Dependence and Remission (vol 37, pg 1321, 2012) [Correction]
Thoma, Robert; Mullins, Paul; Ruhl, David; Monnig, Mollie; Yeo, Ronald A; Caprihan, Arvind; Bogenschutz, Michael; Lysne, Per; Tonigan, Scott; Kalyanam, Ravi; Gasparovic, Charles
ISI:000301602400025
ISSN: 0893-133x
CID: 1478442