Profile
International Journal of Clinical Case Studies Volume 1 (2015), Article ID 1:IJCCS-102, 9 pages
http://dx.doi.org/10.15344/2455-2356/2015/102
Case Study
A Case Study of Adolescent Substance Misuse: A Successful Application of the Adolescent Community Reinforcement (A-CRA) approach in an Irish context

Jo-Hanna Ivers1* and Kevin Ducray2

1Department of Public Health & Primary Care, Trinity College Dublin, Irland
2National Drug Treatment Centre Board, Ireland
Jo-Hanna Ivers, Department of Public Health & Primary Care, Trinity College Dublin, Irland; E-mail: jivers@tcd.ie
15 January 2015; 25 March 2015; 27 March 2015
Ivers J, Ducray K (2014) A Case Study of Adolescent Substance Misuse: A Successful Application of the Adolescent Community Reinforcement (A-CRA) approach in an Irish context. Int J Clin Case Stud 1: 102. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.15344/2455-2356/2015/102

Abstract

In October 2012, 83 front-line Irish service providers working in the addiction treatment field received accreditation as trained practitioners in the delivery of a number of evidence-based positive reinforcement approaches that address substance use: 52 received accreditation in the Community Reinforcement Approach (CRA), 19 in the Adolescent Community Reinforcement Approach (ACRA) and 12 in Community Reinforcement and Family Training (CRAFT).
This case study presents the treatment of a 17-year-old white male engaging in high-risk substance use. He presented for treatment as part of a court order. Treatment of the substance use involved 20 treatment sessions and was conducted per Adolescent Community Reinforcement Approach (A-CRA). This was a pilot of A-CRA a promising treatment approach adapted from the United States that had never been tried in an Irish context.
A post-treatment assessment at 12-week follow-up revealed significant improvements. At both assessment and following treatment, clinician severity ratings on the Maudsley Addiction Profile (MAP) and the Alcohol Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test (ASSIST) found decreased score for substance use was the most clinically relevant and suggests that he had made significant changes. Also his MAP scores for parental conflict and drug dealing suggest that he had made significant changes in the relevant domains of personal and social functioning as well as in diminished engagement in criminal behaviour. Results from this case study were quite promising and suggested that A-CRA was culturally sensitive and applicable in an Irish context.