Authors
Salam Sulaiman, Richard Yi, Jennifer E Johnson, Andre Johnson, Ashley Kucera, Jaclyn M Johnson, Adhithi Keerthana Athikumar, Aanandita Bali, Julia W Felton
Published in
Health & justice. Jun 25, 2026. Epub Jun 25, 2026.
Abstract
Returning citizens with substance use disorders (SUD) make numerous decisions that involve engaging in behaviors with short-term, immediate rewards (i.e. the pleasurable effects of returning to use) relative to those with longer-term, but delayed, benefits (i.e. engaging in treatment), often in the context of resource-poor and unstable environments. Successful navigation of the reentry period may require making future-oriented decisions; yet previous research suggests that incarcerated individuals and those with SUD evidence steeper rates of delay discounting, or tendency to devalue something as a function of the delay of its receipt. Episodic future thinking has been shown to reduce delay discounting and improve decision-making, suggesting it may be particularly well-suited to support healthy decision-making among justice-involved populations. The current study evaluated the implementation potential and preliminary effectiveness of an episodic future thinking intervention adapted for individuals during the reentry period to reduce delay discounting and improve related clinical outcomes.
Returning citizens (n = 40) who identified as in recovery from SUD and had experienced incarceration within 12 months prior to enrollment were recruited to participate in a randomized controlled trial. Participants received either a brief (60-min) adapted episodic future thinking intervention or a control intervention that did not activate future thinking. Both interventions were administered by a peer recovery coach in a community setting. Participants then completed weekly check-ins for up to four weeks and were assessed one month after the intervention.
Findings suggest that peer-delivered episodic future thinking was feasible and acceptable, and could be delivered with fidelity. Additionally, participants in the active condition experienced significant decreases in delay discounting, significant increases in considerations of future consequences, and increases in the presence of protective factors that may support longer-term recovery. Participants in the control condition did not experience changes in clinically-relevant outcomes.
Results of this study provide preliminary support for the implementation potential and effectiveness of brief, peer-delivered intervention focused on improving decision-making during the reentry period.
PMID:
42348052
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 25 Jun 2026.
Read full publication at:
Please sign in
to see all details.
Advertisement
Stats
- Recommendations n/a n/a positive of 0 vote(s)
- Views 12
- Comments 0