Title: BEHAVIOURAL CHOICE THEORIES OF ADDICTION
1BEHAVIOURAL CHOICE THEORIES OF ADDICTION
- Nick Heather PhD,
- Centre for Alcohol Drug Studies,
- Newcastle, North Tyneside Northumberland Mental
Health NHS Trust, - University of Northumbria
2THE LANGUAGE OF CHOICE
- Behavioural economics a merging of
micro-economic theory and a revolution in
behavioural psychology beginning in the 1960s
(the matching law) - Addiction is a real phenomenon, not merely a
series of causal attributions - Addicts choices are predictable
- Addicts choose to consume drugs etc. but do not
choose to be addicted - Addicts choices are constrained like all
choices
3A DEFINITION OF ADDICTION
- (addiction is shown by) a demonstrated failure
to refrain from a behaviour despite attempts to
do so or a complaint by the person that the
behaviour is out of his or her control. - Heather, N. (in press). Comments on O-J. Skog,
Addiction definitions and mechanisms. In R.E.
Vuchinich N. Heather (Eds.), Choice,
Behavioural Economics and Addiction. Oxford, UK
Pergamon Press.
4CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK FOR EXPLAINING ADDICTION
Not Sufficient
Not Sufficient
NEUROADAPTION OR PRE-EXISTING DIFFERENCES IN
NEURAL RESPONSE
From Heather, N. (1998) A conceptual framework
for explaining drug addiction, Journal of
Psychopharmacology, 12, 3 - 7
5GEORGE AINSLIES THEORY
- Ainslie, G. (1992). Picoeconomics The Strategic
Interaction of Successive Motivational States
Within The Person. Cambridge, UK Cambridge
University Press. - Ainslie, G. (2000). Breakdown of Will. Cambridge,
UK Cambridge University Press. - Anslie, G. Monterosso, J. (in press).
Hyperbolic discounting as a factor in addiction
a critical analysis. In R.E. Vuchinich N.
Heather (Eds.), Choice, Behavioural Economics and
Addiction. Oxford, UK Pergamon Press.
6HYPERBOLIC DISCOUNT CURVES BEHAVIOURAL CHOICE
THEORIES
Hyperbolic discount curves from two rewards of
different sizes available at different times
(vertical dashed lines). The smaller-sooner
reward is temporarily valued higher (preferred)
for a period just before its available, as shown
by the portion of its curve that projects above
that of the later-larger reward. Where V is
value, A is the undiscounted reward value, D is
delay and k is a constant describing the
individual subjects degree of impatience.
Functions in this class are referred to as
hyperbolic as contrasted with exponential
functions which model temporal discounting as
occurring at a fixed rate over time.
A 1 kD
V
7FOUR WAYS TO MAKE THE SELF-CONTROLLED CHOICE
- Extrapsychic mechanisms (e.g. precommitment)
- Control of attention
- Preparation of emotion
- Personal rules (i.e., will-power)
8THE MELIORATION THEORY OF ADDICTION
- Herrnstein, R.J., Prelec, D. (1992). A theory
of addiction. In G. Loewenstein J. Elster
(Eds.), Choice Over Time (pp. 331-360). New
York Russell Sage Foundation. - Heyman, G.M. (in press). Consumption dependent
changes in reward value a framework for
understanding addiction. In R.E. Vuchinich N.
Heather (Eds.), Choice, Behavioural Economics and
Addiction. Oxford, UK Pergamon Press.
9MELIORATION ADDICTION BEHAVIOURAL CHOICE THEORIES
2
Local Utility of Drug Consumption
Overall Utility
1
3
Local Utility of Other Activities
4
Abstinence
Heavy drug use
Relative Behavioural Allocation to Drug
Consumption Drug Consumption/ (Drug Consumption
Other Activities)
10RATIONAL ADDICTION
- Becker, G.S., Murphy, K.M. (1988). A theory
of rational addiction. Journal of Political
Economy, 96, 675-700. - Skog, O.-J. (1999). Rationality, irrationality
and addiction notes on Becker and Murphy's
theory of addiction. In J. Elster and O.-J. Skog
(Eds.), Getting Hooked Rationality and
Addiction. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press
173-207. - Chaloupka, F.J., Emery, S. Liang, L. (in
press). Evolving models of addictive behavior
from neoclassical to behavioral economics. In
R.E. Vuchinich N. Heather (Eds.), Choice,
Behavioural Economics and Addiction. Oxford, UK
Pergamon Press. -
11RATIONAL ADDICTION BEHAVIOURAL CHOICE THEORIES
Utility of Drug Consumption
2
1
3
Utility of Other Activities
Marginal Utility of Drug Consumption
4
Abstinence (No Stock)
Heavy Drug Use (High Stock)
Stock of Addictive Capital
12RACHLINS RELATIVE THEORY OF ADDICTION
- Rachlin, H. (1997). Four teleological theories
of addiction. Psychonomic Bulletin and Review,
4, 462-473. - Rachlin, H. (2000). The Science of
Self-control. Cambridge, MA Harvard University
Press. - Rachlin, H. (in press). Economic concepts in the
behavioural study of addiction. In R.E. Vuchinich
N. Heather (Eds.), Choice, Behavioural
Economics and Addiction. Oxford, UK Pergamon
Press.
13RELATIVE ADDICTION BEHAVIOURAL CHOICE THEORIES
Relative Behavioural Allocation to Drug
Consumption and Social Interaction
14APPLICATIONS TO TREATMENT (1)
- Ainslies theory obviously relevant to
self-control or self-management techniques
developed in early 1970s (e.g., Mahoney and
Thoresen 1974 Thoresen and Mahoney 1974) - Also relevant to cognitive therapy (e.g., Beck et
al. 1993) - May also be relevant to the mechanism of
motivational interviewing - Several aspects of modern cognitive-behavioural
approaches to treatment can be interpreted within
a behavioural economics framework (e.g.
self-efficacy, relapse prevention)
15APPLICATIONS TO TREATMENT (2)
- Behavioural economic principles more generally
have been applied successfully to contingency
management programs (e.g. Community Reinforcement
Approach) see work of Bickel, Higgins and
colleagues - But can these reframings of existing treatment
modalities lead to improvements in effectiveness? - And can the behavioural economic perspective lead
to quite novel methods of treatment?
16APPLICATIONS TO PUBLIC HEALTH AND THE
ORGANISATION OF TREATMENT SERVICES (1)
- Tucker, J.A. Simpson, C.A. (in press). Merging
behavioural economic and public health approaches
to the delivery of services for substance abuse
concepts and applications. In R.E. Vuchinich N.
Heather (Eds.), Choice, Behavioural Economics and
Addiction. Oxford, UK Pergamon Press. - Ways of closing the currently existing gap
between need and utilization and policies for
allocating limited intervention resources in a
more cost-effective manner across the population
in need. - Perhaps the main advantage of the behavioural
economic perspective over other perspectives on
service provision is its inherent emphasis on
behavioural alternatives to addiction.
17APPLICATIONS TO PUBLIC HEALTH AND THE
ORGANISATION OF TREATMENT SERVICES (2)
- Applying the behavioural economic perspective to
the organization of treatment services views
care-seeking and adherence as choice processes. - To facilitate care-seeking and adherence one
should attempt to make services more attractive
and easier to access, and thus very different
from the intense, high-threshold services that
have dominated addiction treatment in the past.
18APPLICATIONS TO PREVENTION AND PUBLIC POLICY
- McCoun, R. (in press). Is the addiction concept
useful for drug policy? In R.E. Vuchinich N.
Heather (Eds.), Choice, Behavioural Economics and
Addiction. Oxford, UK Pergamon Press. - McCouns answer is No and that applies too to
behavioural choice theories of addiction. - Behavioural choice theories have the implication
that increases in the price of addictive
substances will lead to lower levels of use and
therefore harm. But that again is hardly novel.
19POTENTIAL USEFULNESS OF BEHAVIOURAL CHOICE
THEORIES
- There is nothing so useful as a good theory
(Kurt Lewin, 1951) - i.e., if a theory provides an accurate and
adequate explanation for the occurrence of an
observable phenomenon, it must, by definition,
contain within it the means of changing that
phenomenon - It may be that the main influence of behavioural
choice theories will be, not on the technology
of treatment or public health and prevention
policies, but on the way addiction is generally
understood