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Mindfulness for Alcohol Abusing Offenders (MIT)

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The Mind Research Network

Status

Completed

Conditions

Alcohol Abuse
Criminal Behavior

Treatments

Behavioral: Relapse Prevention
Behavioral: Mindfulness

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Over half of state and federal prisoners meet clinical criteria for alcohol abuse or dependence, and after release from prison, over three-quarters of offenders are re-arrested within five years. Thus, there is a critical need for more effective interventions that could help disrupt this insidious cycle of alcohol abuse, criminal behavior, and incarceration. This project will support the development and evaluation of a mindfulness intervention for female prison inmates that will target key neuropsychological vulnerabilities that are associated with relapse and recidivism.

Full description

The pernicious link between substance abuse and criminal behavior imposes major costs to society, totaling billions of dollars in the U.S. annually. There is a critical need for more effective interventions to counteract the high rates of relapse and recidivism in alcohol and substance abusing criminal offenders. Periods of offender incarceration provide a unique opportunity to develop and deploy such interventions. Progress in intervention development could be achieved by targeting specific cognitive and affective vulnerabilities that are common among substance abusing criminal offenders. Preliminary studies suggest that meditative or mindfulness interventions may confer significant psychological and behavioral benefits to inmates. However, the mechanisms and extent of intervention efficacy are unclear, as these previous studies have been beset by a number of methodological limitations. Moreover, to date no study has examined the neurobiological mechanisms that relate to treatment success in this population. NIAAA has recently made a program call to address these issues (PA-15-299). Here we answer this program call and propose to undertake a rigorous and comprehensive longitudinal study of mindfulness treatment of alcohol and substance use disorders among female inmates. This project will randomly assign over 400 female inmates to a mindfulness or relapse prevention training course, and both will be compared against a no treatment control. The mindfulness intervention will be tailored to address two key neuropsychological deficits in alcohol abusing criminal offenders: impulsivity and craving. We will test hypotheses about the neural changes over time with treatment to elucidate mechanisms of change. We will obtain estimates of "real-world" efficacy of the intervention by collecting outcome measures in prison (conduct reports) and following release (alcohol use relapse and antisocial behavior). This project takes advantage of a unique, longstanding partnership between the research team and the states of New Mexico and Wisconsin Correction Departments that allows collection of comprehensive assessment data from inmates during incarceration, including brain imaging data with a mobile MRI scanner, as well as access to post-release outcomes and relapse data. Completion of these aims is a critical step for implementing and evaluating a promising mindfulness intervention for this high-risk population. The proposed research will also begin to elucidate the psychological and neurobiological mechanisms of the treatment. These results will thus significantly advance a program of research seeking to translate the growing knowledge of neuropsychological deficits into more targeted and effective treatments for alcohol and substance abuse problems in criminal offenders.

Enrollment

392 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 18-65 years of age
  • Alcohol Use Disorder
  • Female (biological sex at birth)
  • Time to release from incarceration > 3 months
  • 5th grade or higher reading level
  • Able to speak and understand English

Exclusion criteria

  • Uncorrectable auditory or visual deficits
  • Intelligence Quotient score below 70
  • History of dementia or other cognitive disability
  • Current psychotic disorder (chronic schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder and/or active psychotic symptoms)
  • Major medical illness or Central Nervous System disease
  • MRI incompatibility (e.g., metal in body)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

392 participants in 4 patient groups

Mindfulness
Experimental group
Description:
Mindfulness
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mindfulness
Relapse Prevention
Experimental group
Treatment:
Behavioral: Relapse Prevention
Waitlist Control
No Intervention group
Treatment as Usual
No Intervention group

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Jenna Shold, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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