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Community Reinforcement and Family Training (CRAFT) with Concerned Significant Others of Problem Gamblers Nicole Peden & David C. Hodgins University of.

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Presentation on theme: "Community Reinforcement and Family Training (CRAFT) with Concerned Significant Others of Problem Gamblers Nicole Peden & David C. Hodgins University of."— Presentation transcript:

1 Community Reinforcement and Family Training (CRAFT) with Concerned Significant Others of Problem Gamblers Nicole Peden & David C. Hodgins University of Calgary

2 Rationale for Working with CSOs Engaging CSOs is an excellent way to access problem gamblers who are resistant to treatment Problem gamblers report that family influence was an important reason why they quit gambling CSOs are in need of help themselves

3 Traditional Approaches 12 Step Programs Johnson Institute Intervention Mental Health Counseling Nothing

4 12 Step Programs Loving detachment Acceptance of CSOs inability to control IPs behaviour Group support for CSO

5 Johnson Institute Intervention IP is confronted at a “surprise party” 29% of CSOs complete training and carry out the intervention Overall success rate: 24% enter treatment

6 CRAFT Goals 1) Engage addict into treatment 2) Reduce addictive behaviour 3) Decrease CSO distress

7 CRAFT Theory Rooted in Behaviour Theory  Operant Conditioning Aspects  Problem focused (e.g., problem solving, functional analysis)  Skills based (e.g., communication training, use of positive reinforcement and time out from pr, natural consequences for using)  Active during sessions (e.g., role plays, exercises)  Active between sessions (e.g., assignments, suggesting treatment)

8 Empirical Support Makarchuk, Hodgins, & Peden (2002) Method 31 CSOs randomly assigned to CRAFT workbook vs. standard treatment package 3 month follow up Results Gambling behaviour decreased in CRAFT workbook group Treatment entry rates similar for both groups CSO distress improved in both groups

9 Empirical Support Hodgins, Toneatto, Makarchuk, Skinner, & Vincent (2004) Method 186 CSOs randomly assigned to 1) CRAFT workbook, 2) CRAFT workbook + telephone support, 3) a control package 3, 6 month follow ups Results Fewer days gambled in CRAFT workbook groups Treatment entry rates similar for all groups CSO distress improved in all groups

10 Empirical Support CRAFT GOALS PopulationCRAFT StudyTreatment Engagement Reduce Addictive Behaviour Decrease CSO Distress Substance Abuse Sisson & Azrin (1986) NA Miller, Meyers, & Tonigan (1999) NA = Kirby, Marlowe, Festinger, Garvey, & LaMonaca (1999) == Meyers, Miller, Hill & Tonigan (1999) Meyers, Miller, Smith & Tonigan (2002) NA = Waldron et al., (2003) NA Problem Gambling Makarchuk, Hodgins, & Peden (2002) = = Hodgins, Toneatto, Makarchuk, Skinner, & Vincent (2004) = =

11 CRAFT Study Conclusions CRAFT is the only therapy that is aimed at helping both the gambler and the CSO AND Has some empirical evidence to support its utility

12 Study Objectives Phase I Modify and deliver the CRAFT intervention in an individual face-to-face format to CSOs of problem gamblers Phase II Compare CRAFT individual intervention to the CRAFT self-help intervention

13 Collaboration and Funding Collaboration with AADAC Counseling Services in Calgary Funding support from Alberta Gaming Research Institute

14 Ethics Department of Psychology Research Ethics Board (DPREB) November 2005 Conjoint Faculties Research Ethics Board (CFREB) January 2006

15 Development of CRAFT therapist manual, client handouts, and treatment integrity checklist. Initial telephone contact, screening, and recruitment. Administration of pre-treatment assessment measures (face-to-face interview). Assignment to treatment condition. CRAFT Self-help CRAFT Individual WorkbookIntervention Post-treatment assessment (telephone interview). Six-month assessment (telephone interview) + gift certificate mail out.

16 Sample Advertisement

17 Inclusion Criteria 1) CSO be over the age of 18 2) CSO have a minimum of 3+days/week of contact with the gambler 3) Gambler be resistant to suggestion for treatment 4) Gambler and the CSO must have not attended treatment for gambling related problems in the last 2 months 5) Gambler must meet criteria for problem gambling (as reported by the CSO) and the CSO should be free of problems with gambling 6) Record sessions 7) Provide follow-up data 8) Provide the name of a collateral to help locate them for the post-assessment and 6-month interviews

18 Measures GAMBLING BEHAVIOURS, MOTIVATIONS, CONSEQUENCES 1. Gambling Behaviour 2. Treatment Involvement 3. Inventory of Consequences for the IP and CSO 4. University of Rhode Island Change Assessment Inventory - Gambler version RELATIONSHIP FUNCTIONING 1. Relationship Happiness Scale 2. Relationship Assessment Scale

19 CSO PSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTIONING 1. Brief Symptom Inventory 2. Depression Anxiety Stress Scales 2. State-trait Anger Expression Inventory-II REACTIONS TO TREATMENT 1. Attendance/Workbook adherence 2. Working Alliance Inventory 3. Satisfaction questions about the program Measures

20 CRAFT in 7 Modules (8-12 Sessions) 1) Building and sustaining motivation 2) Functional analysis of the gambling behaviour 3) Improving communication skills 4) Positive reinforcements for non- gambling behaviour 5) Use of negative consequences 6) Helping the CSO enrich their own lives 7) Suggesting treatment/Termination and additional resources

21 Hypotheses 1)CRAFT individual intervention = less gambling and more gamblers entering treatment 2)CRAFT individual intervention = lower levels of personal distress and better relationship functioning with the gambler

22 Data Analysis Hypotheses = group (CI, CW) x time interaction (Pre, Post, 6m) ANOVA will examine differences between groups for each outcome category 1.Days gambled 2.Treatment engagement 3.CSO functioning

23 STRENGTHS  Unique contribution  Random assignment  Use of treatment manual  Treatment adherence check (non-invested rater)  Blind follow-ups LIMITATIONS  CSO report  Less experienced clinicians  Sample size  Limited measurements

24 Questions


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