Despite recent improvements in the US economy, unemployment remains a significant concern, and estimates indicate that one-third of unemployed persons drink at hazardous levels, adversely impacting their health and abilities to find jobs. Reinforcement interventions are highly efficacious in reducing substance use, and they can be applied to increase job-seeking activities as well. In partnership with CT United Labor Agency, this project is designed to reduce hazardous drinking and enhance active participation in job-seeking activities among those with job loss. It will evaluate the independent and combined effects of reinforcing negative breathalyzer samples and job-seeking activities to ascertain the simplest and most cost-effective approach to improving outcomes in this population. Unemployed individuals with hazardous drinking (N = 280) will be randomly assigned to one of four conditions using a 2 x 2 design: standard care, standard care with reinforcement for submitting negative breathalyzer samples, standard care with reinforcement for job-seeking activities, or standard care plus reinforcement for both negative breathalyzer samples and job-seeking activities. Participants in all conditions will receive usual services part of CT United Labor Agency, along with a novel remote breath alcohol monitoring procedure. The study interventions will be in effect for three months, and participants will be followed for one year. Alcohol and other drug use, employment, psychiatric symptoms, and global measures of health will be assessed throughout treatment and follow-up. Reinforcing negative breathalyzer samples is expected to significantly reduce drinking, and reinforcing job-seeking activities is expected to increase re-employment rates and reduce time until job attainment. Reinforcing both negative breathalyzer samples and job-seeking activities is hypothesized to improve outcomes along both domains. The reinforcement interventions may also decrease psychiatric distress and slow progression of physical decline, common among the unemployed. If efficacious and cost-effective, results from this study may stimulate adoption of reinforcement interventions in the context of unemployment services. Reducing the adverse consequences of hazardous drinking and improving job re-entry may have pronounced benefits in a highly vulnerable segment of the US population.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
240
Participants will earn reinforcement (incentives) for each alcohol negative breath test provided (when prompted to submit a test) during the 12-week intervention period.
Participants will earn reinforcement (incentives) for completing specific job-related activities during the 12-week intervention period.
Participants will complete job-related activity contracts each week with the goal of obtaining employment.
United Labor Agency
Middletown, Connecticut, United States
Longest Duration of Alcohol Abstinence (Samples) (Physiological Measure)
Greatest number of consecutive breath tests submitted on-time (within 1 hour of prompt) and reading alcohol negative (BAL \< 0.02)
Time frame: 12 weeks
Percent Alcohol Negative Breath Tests
Of alcohol breath tests requested, the percentage submitted on-time (within 1-hour of prompt) and reading alcohol-negative (BAL \< .02)
Time frame: 12 weeks
Percent of Days Worked for Pay (Missing Data Treated as Missing)
The percentage of days of work for pay (in the formal or informal economy), with the number of days of data in the denominator (missing data considered missing)
Time frame: 12 weeks
Time to First Worked
From study day 1, the number of days until first worked in the formal or informal economy during the 12-week intervention, censored at day 85.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Percent of Days Worked for Pay (84 Day Intervention Period in the Denominator)
The percent of days worked for pay (in the formal or informal economy), with 84 days (intervention period duration; missing treated as not working) in the denominator
Time frame: 12 weeks
Longest Duration of Alcohol Abstinence (Days) (Physiological Measure)
Greatest number of consecutive days of submitting all breath tests requested on-time and reading alcohol negative
Time frame: 12 weeks
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