A Behavioral Treatment of Alcoholic Methadone Patients
Abstract
Alcoholism is a frequent complication of methadone treatment and is one of the few behaviors found to correlate with methadone treatment failure. To eliminate drinking among severely alcoholic patients, we tested the efficacy of incorporating methadone into a behavioral contingency to reinforce disulfiram ingestion. Methadone was dispensed to alcoholic narcotic addicts contingent upon their ingesting disulfiram, and as a control patients were urged to take disulfiram but received methadone regardless of whether they took disulfiram. The results indicated that the reinforced disulfiram treatment was highly successful in controlling alcoholism. In addition, nonstatistically significant trends suggested that the reinforced disulfiram treatment resulted in a superior adjustment, as reflected in arrest rate, unemployment, and illicit drug use. There appeared to be no significant physiologic or behavioral adverse effects.
Article and Author Information
-
▸From the Department of Psychiatry, Baltimore City Hospitals; and the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine; Baltimore, Maryland.
-
Grant support: in part by grant AA-00379, U.S. Public Health Service, Washington, D.C.
-
▸Requests for reprints should be addressed to Ira A. Liebson, M.D. Department of Psychiatry, Baltimore City Hospitals, 4940 Eastern Avenue; Baltimore, MD 21224.
-
- Received November 21, 1977.
- Accepted April 6, 1978.
- © 1978 American College of Physicians
RSS Feeds









