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Karen L. Dugosh
Researcher at Temple University
Publications - 73
Citations - 2525
Karen L. Dugosh is an academic researcher from Temple University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Drug court & Contingency management. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 67 publications receiving 2267 citations. Previous affiliations of Karen L. Dugosh include University of Georgia & University of Pennsylvania.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Extended vs Short-term Buprenorphine-Naloxone for Treatment of Opioid-Addicted Youth: A Randomized Trial
George E. Woody,Sabrina Poole,Geetha Subramaniam,Karen L. Dugosh,Michael P. Bogenschutz,Patrick J. Abbott,Ashwin A. Patkar,Mark Publicker,Karen McCain,Jennifer Sharpe Potter,Robert F. Forman,Victoria L. Vetter,Laura McNicholas,Jack Blaine,Kevin G. Lynch,Paul J. Fudala +15 more
TL;DR: Continuing treatment with buprenorphine-naloxone improved outcome compared with short-term detoxification, and extended medication-assisted therapy may be more helpful for young individuals with opioid dependence.
Journal ArticleDOI
A Systematic Review on the Use of Psychosocial Interventions in Conjunction With Medications for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction
Karen L. Dugosh,Amanda J. Abraham,Brittany L. Seymour,Keli McLoyd,Mady Chalk,David S. Festinger +5 more
TL;DR: The results generally support the efficacy of providing psychosocial interventions in combination with medications to treat opioid addictions, although the incremental utility varied across studies, outcomes, medications, and interventions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Matching Judicial Supervision to Clients’ Risk Status in Drug Court
TL;DR: Results confirmed that participants who were high risk and matched to biweekly hearings had better during-treatment outcomes than participants assigned to status hearings as usual.
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Prize-based contingency management for the treatment of substance abusers: a meta-analysis.
Lois A. Benishek,Lois A. Benishek,Karen L. Dugosh,Kim C. Kirby,Kim C. Kirby,Jason Matejkowski,Jason Matejkowski,Nicolle Clements,Nicolle Clements,Brittany L. Seymour,David S. Festinger,David S. Festinger +11 more
TL;DR: Adding prize-based contingency management to behavioral support for substance use disorders can increase short-term abstinence, but the effect does not appear to persist to 6 months.
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Substance abuse treatment providers’ beliefs and objections regarding contingency management: Implications for dissemination
TL;DR: Results indicate that positive beliefs were surprisingly prevalent, with providers agreeing with an average of 67% of the positive statements regarding CM using tangible incentives and 54% indicating that they would be in favor of adding a tangible CM intervention to their treatment program.