Azrin N H, McMahon P T, Donohue B, Besalel V A, Lapinski K J, Kogan E S, Acierno R E, Galloway E
Nova Southeastern University, Center for Psychological Studies, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33314.
Behav Res Ther. 1994 Nov;32(8):857-66. doi: 10.1016/0005-7967(94)90166-x.
82 Ss were studied in a comparative evaluation of a behavioral vs supportive treatment for illegal drug use. Behavioral treatment included stimulus control, urge, control, contracting/family support and competing response procedures for an average of 19 sessions. 37% of Ss in the behavioral condition were drug-free at 2 months, 54% at 6 months, and 65% at 12 months vs 20 +/- 6% for the alternative treatment during all 12 months. The behavioral treatment was more effective across sex, age, educational level, marital status and type of drug (hard-drugs, cocaine, and marijuana). Greater improvement for this condition was also noted on measures of employment/school attendance, family relationships, depression, institutionalization and alcohol use.