Charles E. Drebing, E. Alice Van Ormer, Christopher Krebs, Robert Rosenheck, Bruce Rounsaville, Lawrence Herz, & Walter Penk (2005).
The impact of enhanced incentives on vocational rehabilitation outcomes for dually diagnosed veterans.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
38, 359-372.
This study evaluated the efficacy of adding contingency management
techniques to vocational rehabilitation (VR) to improve treatment
outcome as measured by entry into competitive employment. Nineteen
dually diagnosed veterans who entered VR in the Veterans’
Administration’s compensated work therapy (CWT) program were
randomly assigned to CWT (n = 8) or to CWT with enhanced incentives (n = 11).
Over the first 16 weeks of rehabilitation, those in the incentives condition
could earn up to $1,006 in cash for meeting two sets of clinical
goals: (a) remaining abstinent from drugs and alcohol and (b) taking steps to
obtain and maintain a competitive job. Results indicate that relative to
participants in the CWT-only group, those in the incentives condition
engaged in more job-search activities, were more likely to remain abstinent
from drugs and alcohol, were more likely to obtain competitive employment,
and earned an average of 68% more in wages. These results suggest
that rehabilitation outcomes may be enhanced by restructuring traditional
work-for-pay contingencies to include direct financial rewards for meeting
clinical goals.
DESCRIPTORS: vocational rehabilitation, contingency management