A dramatic increase in likelihood of people who inject drugs completing a course of hepatitis B virus vaccination was seen with small cash incentives, totaling as little as £30.

The study was led by Professor John Strang from the National Addiction Centre at King's College London, UK, working in close collaboration with senior colleagues at Imperial College London and University College London (UCL), in the UK.
"That monetary incentives increase compliance is unremarkable, but the size of the increase we observed was striking"*, says Professor Strang. "Injecting drug users are at high risk of infection and transmission of hepatitis B. This is a potentially life-saving vaccine, and increasing its uptake among this group has important benefits to public health, as well as to the individual."*
HBV affects about 22% of injecting drug users in the UK, and much higher proportions in other countries. Medication can slow the spread of HBV, but there is no completely effective cure. It is estimated that 15-25% of people with untreated chronic HBV die of liver disease [1]. A highly effective vaccine exists, but the rate of vaccination uptake is poor. Financial incentive-based public health strategies for treating addiction have gained popularity in the USA in recent years, but such incentive schemes are less common in the UK.
The new study enrolled 210 people receiving opioid substitution therapy from 12 National Health Service drug treatment services across the UK. Services were randomly assigned to different voucher schedules, so that patients received either HBV vaccination without incentive (treatment as usual), fixed value contingency management (£10 voucher at each of three vaccinations), or escalating value contingency management (£5 voucher at first vaccination visit, £10 voucher at second visit, and £15 voucher at third visit).
The researchers compared the effectiveness of these three approaches in achieving completion of vaccination. In the treatment as usual group, only six (9%) of 67 participants completed all scheduled vaccinations, compared with 35 (45%) of 78 participants in the fixed reward group, and 32 (49%) of 65 participants in the escalating reward group.
According to Professor Strang, "Our research finds that offering financial incentives improves people's completion of HBV vaccination, and can be achieved in routine clinical practice. However, even with these improvements, only about half the participants completed the vaccination schedule in the contingency management groups: more work is needed to refine the reward scheme to increase further the uptake and completion of vaccination."*
Source-Eurekalert
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