The Columbus Dispatch

Calif. may pay drug addicts to stay sober

- Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Frustrated by out-of-control increases in drug overdose deaths, California’s leaders are trying something radical: They want the state to be the first to pay people to stay sober.

The federal government has been doing it for years with military veterans and research shows it is one of the most effective ways to get people to stop using drugs like cocaine and methamphet­amine, stimulants for which there are no pharmaceut­ical treatments available.

It works like this: People earn small incentives or payments for every negative drug test over a period of time. Most people who complete the treatment without any positive tests can earn a few hundred dollars. They usually get the money on a gift card.

It’s called “contingenc­y management” and Gov. Gavin Newsom has asked the federal government for permission to use tax dollars to pay for it through Medicaid, the joint state and federal health insurance program for the poor and disabled that covers nearly 14 million people in California.

Meanwhile, a similar proposal is moving through California’s Democratic-controlled Legislatur­e. It’s already passed the Senate with no opposition and is pending in the Assembly, where it has a Republican co-author.

“I think there is a lot in this strategy for everyone to like,” said state Sen. Scott Wiener, a Democrat from San

Francisco and author of the bill. “Most important of all, it works.”

How much it would cost depends on how many people participat­e. A program covering 1,000 people could cost as much as $286,000, a pittance in California’s total operating budget of more than $262 billion.

The San Francisco AIDS Foundation, a nonprofit agency, runs a small, privately-funded contingenc­y management program. It’s where Tyrone Clifford, who was addicted to meth, enrolled because they promised to pay him for every negative test over 12 weeks.

His first payment was $2. That increased slightly with each subsequent negative test for a total of about $330.

“I thought, I can do 12 weeks. I’ve done that before when my dealer was in jail,” he said. “When I’m done I’ll have 330 bucks to get high with.”

Clifford did make it through the program without a positive test. But instead of using the money to buy more drugs, he bought a laptop computer so he could go back to school. He said he hasn’t used methamphet­amine in 11 years and now works as a counselor at the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, helping people who had the same addiction problems he did.

Clifford, 53, said earning the money didn’t matter much. Unlike some who struggle with drug addiction, Clifford always had a job and a house and was never much in danger of losing either. But he said watching his account grow with each negative test motivated him more than any other treatment program did.

“You watch those dollar values go up, there is proof right there that I am doing this,” he said. “By no means is anyone getting rich off this program.”

There is “clear and convincing evidence” that the treatment works to keep people sober from drugs like methamphet­amine and cocaine, according to an analysis by the California Health Benefits Review Program. However, while research shows it is effective in keeping people sober during the program, the effect doesn’t last much beyond six months after treatment concludes.

Clifford acknowledg­ed the program doesn’t work for everybody, but added his treatment included extensive group and individual counseling sessions that kept him accountabl­e and made him feel part of a community.

Clifford said he considers the treatment a success even if people don’t make it without a positive test.

“They are trying something,” he said.

If California starts paying for contingenc­y management treatment through Medicaid, Clifford said he thinks it would mean an explosion in similar programs across the state.

California, like most of the country, has struggled with opioid abuse, including drugs like prescripti­on painkiller­s and heroin. But overdose deaths from stimulants in California nearly quadrupled between 2010 and 2019, and the problem has gotten even worse since.

Preliminar­y data from the first nine months of 2020 – when much of the state was locked down because of the coronaviru­s – shows stimulant overdose deaths jumped 42% compared to 2019.

While opioids have several pharmaceut­ical treatments available to help people get sober, there are none for stimulants like methamphet­amine and cocaine, often leaving people to their willpower to kick the habit.

“There is a clear kind of hole in regards to treatment services for individual­s who have a stimulant use disorder,” said Jacey Cooper, director of California’s Medicaid program. “At this point (contingenc­y management) is the only thing people are pointing to that has been effective.”

Contingenc­y management is not widely used because it’s not clear if state and federal law allow Medicaid money to pay for it. California has a law prohibitin­g people from profiting or receiving “kickbacks” from treatment programs. Wiener’s law would clarify contingenc­y management is legal under state law.

 ?? TYRONE CLIFFORD VIA AP ?? Tyrone Clifford, who was addicted to meth, enrolled in a privately funded contingenc­y management program.
TYRONE CLIFFORD VIA AP Tyrone Clifford, who was addicted to meth, enrolled in a privately funded contingenc­y management program.

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