OBJECTIVE: Previous research has suggested that support services
supplementing methadone maintenance programs vary in their cost-
effectiveness. This study examined the cost-effectiveness of varying levels
of supplementary support services to determine whether the relative
cost-effectiveness of alternative levels of support is sustained over time.
METHOD: A group of 100 methadone-maintained opiate users were randomly
assigned to three treatment groups receiving different levels of support
services during a 24-week clinical trial. One group received methadone
treatment with a minimum of counseling, the second received methadone plus
more intensive counseling, and the third received methadone plus enhanced
counseling, medical, and psychosocial services. The results at the end of
the trial period have been published elsewhere. This article reports the
results of an analysis at a 6-month follow-up. RESULTS: The follow-up
analysis reaffirmed the preliminary findings that the methadone plus
counseling level provided the most cost-effective implementation of the
treatment program. At 12 months, the annual cost per abstinent client was
$16,485, $9,804, and $11,818 for the low, intermediate, and high levels of
support, respectively. Abstinence rates were highest, but modestly so, for
the group receiving the high-intensity, high-cost methadone with enhanced
services intervention. CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that large amounts
of support to methadone-maintained clients are not cost-effective, but it
also demonstrates that moderate amounts of support are better than minimal
amounts. As funding for these programs is reduced, these findings suggest a
floor below which supplementary support should not fall.Abstract Teaser