CURRICULUM VITA
CURRICULUM VITA
NAME: Keith Nielsen Humphreys
ADDRESSES: Center for Innovation to Implementation Department of Psychiatry
VA Palo Alto HCS (152-MPD) 401 N. Quarry Road, MC: 5717
795 Willow Road Stanford Univ. School of Medicine
Menlo Park, CA 94025 Stanford, CA 94305-5717
Keith.Humphreys@ KNH@Stanford.edu
EDUCATION:
A. M., Ph.D. University of Illinois 1989-1993
Clinical/Community Psychology Urbana, Illinois
B. A., summa cum laude Michigan State University 1984-1988
Psychology East Lansing, Michigan
CAREER NOTE:
My cv records a lack of academic work from 7/2009-7/2010 because I took leave to serve as Senior Policy Advisor at the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. My principal responsibilities were to design President Obama’s drug strategy and to advise on the prevention, early intervention and treatment of substance use disorders, health insurance coverage for such care, the place of substance use and mental health disorders in the Affordable Care Act, the improvement of community parole/probation systems, and the research base on drug policy.
ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS:
Endowed Chair Esther Ting Memorial Professor 2017-Present
Stanford University School of Medicine
Professor (Tenured) Department of Psychiatry 1995-Present
Stanford University School of Medicine
(Adjunct 1995-1998; Assistant Research
Professor 1998-2001; Associate Research
Professor 2001-2007, Research Professor
with Continuing Term 2007-2013, University
Tenure Line Professor 2013-Present)
Director, Mental Health Policy Section Division of Public Mental Health and 2013-Present
Population Sciences, Department of
Psychiatry, Stanford University
Affiliated Faculty Stanford Center for Innovation in Global Health 2015-Present
Stanford Neurosciences Institute 2014-Present Stanford Center for Health Policy 2003-Present
Stanford Law School 2014-Present
Honorary Professor Institute of Psychiatry at the Maudsley 2009-Present
King’s College, London, UK
Visiting Professor School of Psychology and Sport Sciences 2005
Northumbria University
Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK
Voluntary Clinical Faculty Department of Psychology 1998-2000
University of California at Berkeley
Research Associate Department of Psychiatric Medicine 1987-1989
Michigan State University
MEDICAL CENTER AND POLICY APPOINTMENTS:
Associate Directors Center for Innovation to Implementation 2016-2018
Health Services Research & Development
Service, Veterans Health Administration
Senior Research Career Scientist Health Services Research & Development 2010-Present
Service, Veterans Health Administration
Acting Director Center for Health Care Evaluation 2010-2011
Health Services Research & Development
Service, Veterans Health Administration
Senior Policy Advisor Office of National Drug Control Policy 2009-2010
Executive Office of the President
The White House
Research Career Scientist Health Services Research & Development 2004-2009
Service, Veterans Health Administration
Policy Fellow Office of National Drug Control Policy 2002
Executive Office of the President
Director Program Evaluation and Resource Center 2001-2009
Department of Veterans Affairs
(Associate Director, 1999-2001)
Research Psychologist Center for Health Care Evaluation 1993-2003
VA Palo Alto Health Care System
LICENSURE:
Licensed Clinical Psychologist State of California (PSY14906) 1996-Present
SECURITY CLEARANCE:
Underwent FBI Full Field and Secret Service Background Investigations 2002 & 2010
HONORS:
Herbert Laurie Lecture, Maxwell School, Syracuse University 2019
Jerry Lee Lecture, Stockholm Criminology Symposium 2019
D.K. Stanley Lecture, University of Florida 2019
Fred Kavli Distinguished Lecture, International Society of Neuroethics 2018
Valeriote Goldman Lecture, Santa Clara University 2018
Endowed Chair, Stanford University School of Medicine 2017-
Ludy Benjamin Lecture, Archives of American Psychology 2017
Alan Kazdin Lecture, Department of Psychology, San Jose State University 2015
Best Public Health Book of the Year (co-author), British Medical Association 2010
Distinguished Contribution to Psychology in the Public Interest, APA 2009
Outstanding VA Researcher Award, APA Division 18 (Public Service) 2009
Presidential Citation for Distinguished Service to APA Division 50 (Addictions) 2005
Best Submitted Paper, National VA HSR&D Conference 2005
Distinguished Scientific Early Career Contribution to Addiction Research, APA 2003
Fellow, American Psychological Association (Divisions 27 and 50) 2001
Fellow, Society for Community Research and Action 2000
Veterans Affairs Health Care System Young Investigator Award 1998-1999
Rotterdam Addiction Research Institute Young Investigator Award 1996
American Psychological Association Dissertation Research Award 1993
Scheiderer Award for Outstanding Graduate Research 1992
University of Illinois Graduate Student Fellowships 1989 & 1991
Phi Beta Kappa, Mortar Board National Honor Society, National Merit Scholar 1984-1988
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE:
Grant Proposal Review Committees
Standing Committee Member Study section AA-2, health services research 2002-2006
NIAAA, U.S. National Institutes of Health
Scientific Conference Proposal Review Committee 2002-2004
American Psychological Association
Center Grant Reviewer Collaborative Minority Serving Institution Program 2003
NIAAA, U.S. National Institutes of Health
National Alcohol Research Centers Program 2002
NIAAA, U.S. National Institutes of Health
National Alcohol Research Centers Program 2000
Site visit and overall committee, NIAAA
U.S. National Institutes of Health
Special Emphasis RFA on Alcohol and Spirituality, NIAAA 2000
Panel Member U.S. National Institutes of Health
RFA on: Youth Violence Intervention, U.S. NIH 2000
Office of Behavioral and Social Science Research
Ad-Hoc proposal reviewer UK Medical Research Council, NIDA Clinical Trials 1996-Present
Network, Republic of South Africa Medical
Research Council, Templeton Foundation, Campbell
Social Welfare Collaborative (Copenhagen), Council
for Working Life and Social Research (Stockholm)
NIAAA BSTART Grant program, Health Research
Board of Ireland, VA New Clinical Initiatives Program,
Ontario Mental Health Foundation, Addiction Research Foundation (Toronto), Research Grants Council of
Hong Kong, Social Science and Humanities Research
Council of Canada, Wellcome Trust/DBT India Alliance
Other National and International Committees
Member, Appointed by U.K. Commission on Alcohol Harm Reduction 2020-
Baroness Ilora Finlay
Advisor on Addiction Treatment Department of Health and Social Care 2020-
United Kingdom
Member World Health Organization Committee to develop 2020-
guideline on ensuring balanced national policies
for access and safe use of controlled medicines
Elected Member Council on Criminal Justice 2020-
Member, Appointed by Interdepartmental Substance Use Disorders 2019-
U.S. DHHS Secretary Coordinating Committee
Member, Challenge Group, Independent Review of Drugs, Phase I and II 2019-
Appointed by Professor Home Office and Department of Health
Dame Carol Black United Kingdom
Advisory Board Member RAND OPTIC (Opioid Policy Tools and Information 2018-Present
Center for Research Excellence)
Member Research Advisory Board, Caron Foundation 2017-
Member Scientific Advisory Board, Brandeis/Harvard Center 2016-
to Improve Substance Use Disorder Treatment System
Performance
Member Steering Committee Member, Mental Health COIN, 2016-
Little Rock, Arkansas VA HSR&D Program
Member Scientific Advisory Board, Butler Center for 2014-
Research, Hazelden Foundation
Member International Scientific Advisory Board 2014-
Swiss Research Institute for Public Health
and Addiction, Zurich
Member National 24/7 Sobriety Advisory Council 2014-
Member National Advisory Board, Recovery Research Institute 2012- Harvard Medical School and Mass General Hospital
Senior Editor Surgeon General of the United States Report on Facing 2016
Addiction: Alcohol, Drugs and Health
Invited Participant Government Accountability Office/National Academy of 2016
Medicine Think Tank on Drug Prevention
Elected Member Board, International Society of Addiction Journal Editors 2016-2018
Member Public Education Working Group, National Pain 2013-2014
Strategy Task Force, NIH
Member Expert Group, Action on Addiction, Salisbury, UK 2012-2016
Member Opioid Advisory Task Force 2012-2016
American Academy of Pain Medicine
Member Data Safety Monitoring Board for NIDA Clinical Trials 2012-2016
Network X:BOT and CHOICES studies
Chairman Research Advisory Committee, TRACER Study 2011-2015
Public Health England, UK Government
Member Public Policy Committee 2011-2014
College on Problems of Drug Dependence
Member, Appointed by Adoption of NIDA Treatments Work Group 2011-2012
Director of NIDA
Member, Appointed by National Expert Group 2010-2012
UK Minister for Payment by Outcomes System for Drug Recovery
Government Policy UK Cabinet Office
Member Expert Group on Medications and Addiction Recovery 2010-2012
UK National Treatment Agency
Member Workgroup on Addiction Treatment 2010-2011
Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs
UK Home Office
Member, Appointed by Overarching Committee, President Obama’s 2010
Director, White House National Strategy for HIV/AIDS
ONAP
Member, Appointed by National Advisory Council, Substance Abuse and 2007-2009
U.S. DHHS Secretary Mental Health Services Administration
Member, Appointed by White House Advisory Commission on Drug-Free 2006-2007
President of the United States Communities
Member, Appointed by VA Committee on Care of Veterans with Serious 2005-2008
Undersecretary for Health Mental Illness
Member, Appointed by U.S. Mental Health Task Force 2006-2007
Veterans Affairs Secretary Department of Veterans Affairs
Elected Member Board of the International Society for the 2007-2009
Study of Drug Policy
Member International Advisory Committee 2005-2009
SMART Recovery
Member Scientific Advisory Board, Alcohol Research Group 2004-2009
NIAAA National Alcohol Research Center
Member Sarason Award Committee, American Psychological 2004-2007
Assn and Society for Community Research & Action
Elected Member Board of Professional Affairs 2004-2006
American Psychological Association
Member, Appointed by Substance Abuse Treatment and Prevention 2003-2006
SAMHSA Administrator Consultation Group, Office of the Administrator
Member Advisory Committee, Peer-to-Peer Resource Center 2004
Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance
Chairman, Substance Use National Mental Health Strategic Plan Workgroup 2003-2004
Disorder Committee Veterans Health Administration
Member Washington Circle on Behavioral Health 2003-2009
Performance Measures, CSAT
Member National Advisory Committee, QUERI Substance 2002-2009
Abuse Module, Department of Veterans Affairs
Co-Chairman SAMHSA/VA Workgroup on self-help groups, 2001-2004
addictions and public policy
Elected Member-at-Large Executive Council of Division 50, American 2001-2003
Psychological Association
Member Research Advisory Board, OJJDP 2001-2004
U.S. Department of Justice
Member Psychology of Addictive Behaviors committee to 2003-2007
Make PAB an APA journal (Chairman), committees
To select editor (2003 and 2007)
Member Addiction Practice Research Network Development 2001
Work Group, American Psychological Association
Participant Portfolio Review Committee, Treatment Branch, 1999
NIAAA, U.S. National Institutes of Health
Member Expert Panel on Mental Illness and Self-help 1996
Center for Mental Health Services, SAMHSA
Editorial/Review Activities
Special Issue Co-Editor Journal of General Internal Medicine 2020
Women’s Health Issues 2019
Regional Editor for the Americas Addiction 2015-Present
Editorial Advisor/Senior Editor Addiction 2010-2015
Series Editor Addiction (Treatment Horizons Series) 2003-2006
Editorial Board Member Addiction 2002-2009
Addiction Research and Theory 2003-2009
Alcohol Research and Health 2003-2007
American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse 2016-2020
Journal of Community Psychology 2004-2016
Journal of Studies on Alcohol 2001-2015
Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment 2002-2009
International Journal of Self-Help and Self-Care 2001-2009
and 2010-2014
Psychology of Addictive Behaviors 2005-2008
Journal for Specialists in Group Work 1996-1999
Book Review Editor The Community Psychologist 2000-2003
Associate Editor/Co-Founder International Journal of Self-Help and Self-Care 1998-2000
Ad-Hoc Article Reviewer Acta Psychiatrica Scandanavia, Alcoholism: Clin 1992-Present
and Exper Research, Alcohol Research: Current
Reviews, Am J Community Psychology, Am J
Psychiatry, Am Journal Public Health, Annals of
Internal Medicine, Archives of General Psychiatry,
Behavior Therapy, BMJ, BMJ Open, Clinical
Psychology Review, Cochrane Collaboration,
Cognition and Emotion, Contemporary Drug Probs,
Developmental Psychol, Drug and Alcohol Depend,
Eastern Mediterranean Health J, EClinical Medicine,
European Addiction Research, European Psychiatry,
Evaluation and Program Planning, Eval Review,
Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacolology,
Health Affairs, Health Education and Behavior,
Health Services Research, International Research
Monographs on Addiction, JAMA, JAMA: Pediatrics,
JAMA: Psychiatry, J Affective Disorders,
J Anthropological Research, J Appl Soc Psychology,
J Behav Health Services and Res, J Clinical Psychiatry,
J Consulting and Clin Psychol, J Drug Policy Analysis,
J Groups in Addict and Recovery, J Gen Intern Med,
J Marriage and the Family, J Mental Health, J Muslim
Ment Health, J Nerv and Ment Dis, J Pain, J Primary Prev
J Psychiatric Res, J Public Economics, J of Social and Pers
Rels, Journal of Substance Abuse, Lancet, Medical Care,
New England Journal of Medicine, Pain Medicine,
Personal and Social Psychology Bulletin, Personality
Disorders: Theory, Research and Treatment, Prev in Human
Services, Professional Psychology, Psychiatric Serv,
Psychological Services, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics
Public Health Reports, Public Health Reviews,
Qatar Medical Journal, Social Science and Medicine,
Social Services Review, Substance Abuse,
Substance Abuse Treatment Prevention and Policy,
Topics in Fam Psychol and Counsel, Women’s Hlth Issues
Other Professional/Community Service
Advisory Group Member The Project for Modern Democracy 2018-Present
Chair: Nick Herbert, CBE, MP
Ambassador DrugFAM (UK Charity support families facing addiction) 2017-Present
Chair: Elizabeth Burton-Phillips, MBE
Advisory Board Member Our Ohio Renewal 2016-Present
Chair: J.D. Vance
Co-Chair Appointments and Promotions Committee 2010-Present
Department of Psychiatry, Stanford University
(Member 2010-2012, Co-Chair 2013-)
Founder and Chairman Faculty Advisory Council, Health Policy Forum 2007-Present
Stanford University School of Medicine
Steering Committee California Blue Ribbon Commission on Marijuana Policy 2013-2016
Member Chair: Lt. Governor Gavin Newsom
Executive Council Betty Ford Institute 2010-2014
Betty Ford Center, Palm Springs, California
Member Provost’s Committee on Alcohol on Campus 2011-2013
Stanford University
Member Scientific Committee, International Meeting of the 2013-2015
Society for the Study of Drug Policy
Member, Appointed by Yale University Council Committee on Alcohol 2012-2013
University President in Yale College
Advisor Governor’s Council on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse 2012
State of New Jersey
Moderator Betty Ford Institute State of the Art Conference on 2012
Recovery Support Services, Palm Springs, CA
Expert-of-the-Month SAMSHA Recovery Month Program 2011
Rockville, MD
Member Scientific Committee, 30th International Congress on 2011
Psychology, Capetown, South Africa
Volunteer Consultant Iraq Ministry of Health 2004-2009
Design and reconstruction of mental health system
Research Advisor Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives 2003-2008
The White House
Planning Committee Member National Mental Health Conference 2007 & 2008
Veterans Health Administration, Washington, DC
Planning Committee Member First National Summit on Recovery from Addiction 2005
Center for Substance Abuse Treatment, Washington
Delegate U.S.-Mexico Drug Policy Meeting 2004
Represented Office of VA Undersecretary for Health
Consultant Office of Demand Reduction, White House Office 2001-2003
of National Drug Control Policy
Consultant Office of Governor Gray Davis/State of 2001-2002
California Youth Correctional System
Member Research and Development Committee 2000-2004
Overall Committee/Science Subcommittee & 2015-
VA Palo Alto Health Care System
Nominations Committee American Psychological Association Division 27 1996-2002
Volunteer Counselor Mid-Peninsula Hospice Program, Mt. View, California 1995-2003
Chair SCRA Self-Help Interest Group 1993-1998
TEACHING:
Co-Instructor Policy Labs at Stanford Law School on pay for success 2014-Present
in mental health (2014-2015), cannabis policy (2017),
college binge drinking (2018-2019), opioid epidemic (2020)
Guest lecturer Annual Short Course on Addictions and Drug Policy 2016-2018
EMCDDA, Lisbon Portugal
Mentor and Steering NIDA T32 Post-Doctoral Fellowship on Pain and 2013-Present
Committee Member Substance Abuse, Stanford Medical School
Mentor American Psychiatric Association/SAMHSA 2013-Present
Minority Mentorship Program and NIMH Psychiatry
Fellowship Training Program
Instructor/Coordinator Addiction Psychiatry (12 week course, once/year) 2001-Present
Residency Program in Psychiatry and Behavioral
Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine
Instructor Program Evaluation (12 week course, once/year) 2004-2008
Graduate psychology course in PGSP/Stanford
Doctor of Psychology program
Guest Lecturer Lecture regularly on addiction, self-help groups, 1996-Present
and health care policy in VA Palo Alto, Stanford
and UC-Berkeley courses on pathophysiology,
clinical psychology, neuroscience, psychiatry etc.
Preceptor Health Services Research Postdoctoral Program 1995-Present
Veterans Affairs HSR&D/Stanford University
Instructor Short course: Treatment, prevention and legal 2006
Policy in the drug and alcohol field
West Kent Social Care Trust, Maidstone, UK
Developer Course materials on alcohol self-help groups for 2005
NIAAA/NIH course for medical students
Instructor Short course: Cure and Care for Alcohol Problems 2004
Nordic School of Public Health, Gothenberg, Sweden
Head Supervisor Health Services Research Rotation, Clinical 1998-2003
Psychology Internship Program, VAPAHCS
Supervisor Community Psychology Intervention Practicum 1998-2000
Dept. of Psychology, University of California-Berkeley
Instructor Mental Health Risk in Communities and Individuals 2000
Johns Hopkins University School of Public Health,
Institut de Salut Publica, Barcelona, Spain
Instructor Course: Clinical Psychology 1993
Department of Psychology, University of Illinois
ACTIVE GRANTS:
Principal Investigator, “Senior Research Career Scientist Award”. Department of Veterans Affairs Health Services
Research and Development Service, RCS 04-141-3, 7/2017-6/2024.
This renewable career development award supports pursuit of health services research projects. Dr. Humphreys is one of 7 VA health services researchers nationally to hold the senior level for this award.
Principal Investigator (Multiple PI award w/Todd Korthuis), Western States Node of the Clinical Trials Network.
National Institute on Drug Abuse, NIH, 2UG1DA015815-19, 6/1/2020-5/30/2025.
Partnership between Oregon Health and Science University, Stanford University, and the VA Palo Alto Health Care System to design and conduct innovative clinical trials focused on drug addiction.
Principal Investigator (Multiple PI award joint with Michael Cucciare), “Promoting Benzodiazepine
Cessation through an Electronically-Delivered Patient Self-management Intervention”. Veterans Affairs Health Services Research and Development Service, HX002714-01A2, 9/1/2020-8/30/24.
This project will tailor a self-directed benzodiazepine cessation tool to Veterans, test its effectiveness in
a randomized clinical trial, and conduct a budget impact analysis of its national dissemination.
Principal Investigator (Multiple PI award joint with Brian Knutson and Rob Malenka, “Neurochoice:
Controlling Addictive Choice – from Circuits to Policy. Stanford Neurosciences Institute, 7/1/2017
-12/30/2022.
This interdisciplinary collaboration bridges 12 Stanford faculty in 8 departments who conduct and translate addiction research. This includes circuit-focused work with animals, human clinical trials and imaging studies, and a policymaker network designed to translate science into better drug policy.
Principal Investigator, “Measuring what Matters in and from Primary care”. American Board of Family Medicine,
10/1/2020-9/30/2022.
This study assesses value of routine practice procedures in a national sample of primary care providers.
Principal Investigator, “Mental Health Policy Section”. Silicon Valley Community Foundation, 1/2015-12/2023.
Ongoing gift supporting Dr. Humphreys as mental health policy section director in Psychiatry Department.
Principal Investigator, “Evaluating a Social Impact Bond for Mental Health”. Irvine Foundation/County of Santa
Clara, 9/2014-6/2023.
This grant supports the planning, design, and implementation of a randomized evaluation of an innovative
social impact bond-funded intervention for seriously mentally ill individuals who repeatedly access emergency
and inpatient psychiatric services
Co-Principal Investigator, “Wearable Technology for Mental Health”, (PI: Zhenan Bao), Stanford Catalyst Grand
Challenges Grant, 7/2017-7/2020.
This grant supports a cross-school team engineering a wearable detecting and monitoring mental health.
Co-Investigator, “Using System Dynamics to Enhance the FDA’s Opioids Systems Model and Address the
Ongoing crisis”, (PI: Mohammad Jalali), Food and Drug Administration, 9/1/2019-8/31/2020.
This project is using state of the art modelling techniques to assess the potential impact of different policies on the opioid epidemic.
Co-Investigator, “Cost-effectiveness of Interventions to Reduce Morbidity from Opioid Dependence”, (PI: Doug
Owens), Veterans Affairs Health Services Research and Development Service, 1/1/2018-9/30/2020.
This project is modelling the impact of different health care interventions on opioid dependence outcomes among Veterans, and the cost to the Veterans Health Administration of those interventions.
Co-Investigator, “Making better decisions: Policy Modelling for AIDS and Drug Abuse”, (PI: Doug Owens),
National Institute on Drug Abuse, R01DA015612-16, 2/2019-11/2023.
This project models how health policy and care options affect the course of the opioid and HIV epidemics.
Co-Investigator, “Effectiveness of a Rescue Medication in Preventing Opioid Overdose in Veterans”, (PI: Elizabeth
Oliva), Veterans Affairs Health Services Research and Development Service, HX002193-01A1, 7/1/2018
-6/30/2020.
This project is evaluating the national rollout of naloxone distribution in the VA health care system and developing a risk score indicating when it prescribing it to pain patients is effective and cost-effective.
Co-Investigator, “Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for the Treatment of Veterans with Alcohol Use Disorders”,
(PI: Tim Durazzo), Veterans Affairs Rehabilitation Research and Development Service, RX002303-01,
10/1/2017-9/30/2021.
This clinical trial will evaluate whether transmagnetic brain stimulation reduces substance use and associated psychiatric symptoms in patients being treated for addiction.
Co-Investigator, “Advancing Knowledge Discovery of Postoperative Pain Management”, (PI: Tina Hernandez
-Broussard), National Institute on Drug Abuse, R01 LM013362-01A1, 10/1/2019-4/30/2024.
To use machine learning models to predict which surgery patients will develop problematic opioid use.
Mentor, “Neural Circuitry Underlying Alcohol Use Disorders in Men and Women Veterans”, (PI: Claudia Padula),
Veterans Affairs Clinical Services Research and Development Service, CX001356, 1/1/2017-9/30/2021.
This career development award for Dr. Padula will support her research on how neuroimaging techniques can predict the outcomes of alcohol use disorder treatment.
Mentor, “Addiction Treatment in Medicaid Health Homes”, (PI: Christina Andrews), National Institute on Drug
Abuse, NIH, K01 DA041628, 3/2106-2/2021.
This grant awarded to Dr. Andrews of the Medical University of South Carolina which will support her research on addiction-related health policy as well as her broader career development.
Mentor, “The Epidemiology and Economics of Chronic Back Pain”, (PI: Eric Sun), National Institute on Drug
Abuse, NIH, K08DA042314, 8/17-7/22.
This grant awarded to Dr. Sun of Stanford University will support his career development and research at the intersection of pain and opioid use/misuse.
Mentor, “Pain Catastrophizing, Pain, and Prescription Opioid Use”, (PI: Maisa Ziadni), National Institute on Drug
Abuse, NIH, K23, 8/19-8/24.
This grant awarded to Dr. Ziadni of Stanford University will support her career development and research in the field of pain psychology.
Mentor, “Effect of Pain Catastrophizing on Prescription Drug Craving”, (PI: Sophia You), National Institute on Drug
Abuse, NIH, K23 DA048972, 7/19-6/24.
This grant awarded to Dr. You of Stanford University will support her career development and research in the field of pain psychology.
Mentor, “Reducing racial disparities in the treatment of opioid use disorder using machine learning-based causal
analysis”. (PI: Mathew Kiang), National Institute on Drug Abuse, NIH, K99 DA051534-01, 7/2020-6/2025.
This grant awarded to Dr. Kiang of Stanford University will support his career development and research in the fields of addiction and health disparities.
Mentor, “Adoption and scale-up of long-acting medications for opioid use disorder by U.S. clinicians”, (PI: Chelsea
Shover), National Institute on Drug Abuse, NIH K01 DA050771-01, 10/20-9/25.
This grant awarded to Dr. Shover of Stanford University will support her career development and research in the fields of addiction and epidemiology.
Faculty Member, Pain and Addiction Fellowship Program, NIDA T32DA035165, 7/13-7/23 and
Health Services Research Fellowship, VA HSRD, 3/94-3/23.
Dr. Humphreys is a core faculty member in these two federally-funded training programs, which provide education and mentorship for pre-doctoral and post-doctoral trainees pursuing research careers.
SELECTED OTHER GRANTS COMPLETED AS PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR:
Principal Investigator, “Selection Bias Free Estimation of the Impact of Drug-Focused Twelve Step Mutual Help
Groups”. National Institute on Drug Abuse, Clinical Trials Network Western Node Supplement, 3UG1 DA015815-17S4, 9/1/2018-5/30/2020.
Principal Investigator, “Enhancing the Value of VA’s new Uniform Package of Services for Substance Use
Disorders” (Suite of 4 inter-related grants). Department of Veterans Affairs, Health Services Research and
Development Service, HX-12-001, 10/2012-9/18.
Principal Investigator (Multiple PI award joint with Drs. Brian Knutson and Rob Malenka), “Optimizing
choice: From neuroscience to public policy”, Stanford Neurosciences Institute, 1/1/2015-6/30/2017.
Principal Investigator, “Senior Research Career Scientist Award”. Department of Veterans Affairs Health Services Research and Development Service, RCS 04-141-2, 7/2010-6/2017.
Principal Investigator, “Screening and brief intervention in general medical practice”. Michael Alan Rosen Foundation, 11/2012-11/2016.
Principal Investigator, “Towards an Unbiased Estimate of the Effectiveness of Alcoholics Anonymous”.
National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIH), 8/12-2/15.
Principal Investigator, “Ethical implications of excluding people with mental illness from medical research”.
The Greenwall Foundation, 9/2014-8/2015.
Principal Investigator, “Center for Health Care Evaluation”, Department of Veterans Affairs Health Services
Research and Development Service, 8/2010-8/2011.
Principal Investigator, “Reducing or expanding substance use disorder treatment programs: Evaluating impact from the health care decision-makers’ perspective”, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Substance Abuse Policy Research Program, 9/05-7/09.
Principal Investigator, “Program Evaluation and Resource Center”, Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of
Mental Health Services, 10/01-5/09.
Principal Investigator, “Research Career Scientist Award”. RCS 04-141-1, Department of Veterans Affairs Health Services Research and Development Service. 7/04-7/09.
Principal Investigator, “The epidemiology of problematic substance use behavior in the veteran population”. Department of Veterans Affairs Epidemiology Research and Information Center. 1/1/05-12/30/05.
Principal Investigator, “Exclusion criteria in alcohol services research”. R-01 AA 13315, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIH). 9/01-5/04.
Principal Investigator, “Clinical practices and outcomes in VA methadone maintenance programs”, Veterans Affairs Quality Improvement Research Initiative, 7/00-10/03.
Principal Investigator, "Access to a self-help organization for problem drinkers", National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIH), grant AA11700, 8/97-8/00.
Principal Investigator, "Outcomes and cost offset of Alcoholics Anonymous", National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIH), grant AA10652, 3/95-8/96.
Principal Investigator, “Expanding participation in self-help groups to enhance health and well-being in two major urban centers”, The California Wellness Foundation, 7/00-7/02.
Principal Investigator, “Enhancing participation in and health outcomes of self-help groups”, The California Endowment and The California Wellness Foundation, 7/98-12/98.
JOURNAL ARTICLES (GS metrics: h-index = 70, i10 = 195, citations ~ 15,000):
Humphreys, K., Barreto, N.B., Alessi, S., Carroll, K.M., Crits-Christoph, P., Donovan, D., Kelly, J.F., Schottenfeld,
R.S., Timko, C., & Wagner, T. H. (in press). Impact of twelve step mutual help groups on drug use disorder patients across six clinical trials. Drug and Alcohol Dependence.
Humphreys, K., & Kilmer, B. (in press). Still HOPEful: Re-considering a “failed” replication of swift, certain, and
fair approach to reducing substance use among individuals under criminal justice supervision. Addiction.
Andrews, C., Grogan C., & Humphreys, K. (in press). Medicaid work requirements could exacerbate the opioid
epidemic. American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 46.
Andrews, C. M., & Humphreys, K. (in press). Valuing federally qualified health centers as substance use treatment
providers. Psychiatric Services.
Blonigen, D.M., Harris-Olenak, B., Kuhn, E., Humphreys, K., Timko, C., & Dulin, P. (in press). From “Step Away”
to “Stand Down”: Tailoring a smartphone application for self-management of drinking problems for
military veterans. Journal of Medical Internet Research.
Blonigen, D.M., Harris-Olenak, B., Kuhn, E., Timko, C., Humphreys, K., & Dulin, P. (in press). Using peers to
increase veterans’ engagement in a smartphone application for self-management of hazardous drinking:
a pilot study of acceptability and utility. Psychology of Addictive Behaviors.
Esmaeili, A., Yu, E., Cucciare, M.A., Combs, A.S., Joshi, G., & Humphreys, K. (in press). Health care utilization
and cost effectiveness of a computer-delivered brief alcohol intervention in Veterans Affairs
(VA) liver clinics: a randomized controlled trial. Alcoholism Treatment Quarterly.
Hall, W.D., Darke, S., Humphreys, K., Marsden, J., Neale, J., & West, R. (in press). Addiction’s policy on
publishing studies of involuntary treatment of addiction and its variants. Addiction.
Kelly, J.F., Abry, A., Ferri, M., Humphreys, K. In press. Alcoholics Anonymous and twelve step facilitation treatments for alcohol use disorder: a distillation of a 2020 Cochrane review for clinicians and policy makers. Alcohol and Alcoholism.
Nguyen, L, Durazzo, T.C., Dwayer, C.L., Rauch, A.A., Humphreys, K., Williams, L.M., & Padula, C.B. (in press).
Predicting relapse after alcohol use disorder treatment in a high risk cohort: the roles of anhedonia and
smoking. Journal of Psychiatric Research.
Park, S., Grogan, C., Mosley, J., Pollack, H.A., Humphreys, K., & Friedmann, P. (in press). Correlates of patient-centered care practices at substance use disorder clinics in the United States. Psychiatric Services.
Pollack, H.A., & Humphreys, K. (in press). Reducing violent incidents between police officers and people with
psychiatric and/or substance use disorders. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social
Science.
Rich, J.D., et al. (Humphreys one of 30 signers). (in press). In support of residency training to address the opioid
overdose epidemic. Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics, 47.
Shover, C., Vest, N., Chen, D., Stueber, A., Falasinnu, T., Hah, J., Kim, J., Mackey, I., Weber, K., Ziadni, M.,
Humphreys, K. (in press). Association of state policy allowing medical cannabis for opioid use disorder
with dispensary marketing for this indication: Results from a cross-sectional study of medical cannabis
dispensary websites and social media. JAMA Network Open.
Humphreys, K., & Hall, W.D. (2020). Reducing risks of distortion in cannabis research. Addiction, 115, 799-801.
Humphreys, K., & Shover, C.L. (2020). Recreational cannabis legalization presents an opportunity to reduce the
harms of the U.S. medical cannabis industry. World Psychiatry, 19, 191-192.
Kelly, J.F., Humphreys, K., & Ferri, M. (2020). Alcoholics Anonymous and other 12-step programs for alcohol
Use disorder. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Issue 3. Art. No.: CD012880. DOI:
10.1002/14651858.CD012880.pub2.
Kiang, M., Humphreys, K., Cullen, M., & Basu, S. (2020). Opioid prescribing patterns among United
States medical providers, 2003-2016: retrospective, observational study. BMJ, 368, I6968.
Marsden, J., Darke, S., Hall, W., Hickman, M., Holmes, J., Humphreys, K., Neale, J., Tucker, J., & West, R. (2020).
Mitigating and learning from the impact of COVID-19 on the global addiction problem. Addiction, 116, 1007-1010.
Shover, C.L., Humphreys. K. (2020) Debunking cannabidiol as a treatment for COVID-19: Time for the FDA to
adopt a focused deterrence model?. Cureus, 12: e8671. doi:10.7759/cureus.8671
Humphreys, K. (2019). Networking: Translating neuroscience to public policy. Neuron, 103, 964-966.
Humphreys, K. (2019). Evaluating dynamic impacts of abuse-deterrent prescription opioid formulations.
Addiction, 114, 400-401.
Humphreys, K., & Saitz, R. (2019). Should physicians recommend cannabis as a replacement for opioids?
JAMA, 321, 639-640.
Humphreys, K., & Saitz, R. (2019). Cannabis as a substitute for opioids – reply. [Letter]. JAMA, 322, 273-274.
Andrews, C., & Humphreys, K. (2019). Investing in Medicaid to reverse the opioid epidemic. Psychiatric
Services, 70, 53.
Blonigen, D. Harris-Olenak, D.B., Haber, J.R., Kuhn, E., Timko, C., Humphreys, K., Dulin, P. (2019).
Customizing the content and delivery of a clinical app to treat hazardous drinking among veterans in
primary care. Psychological Services, 16, 250-254.
Cuéllar, M-F, & Humphreys, K. (2019). The political economy of the opioid epidemic. Yale Law and
Policy Review, 38.
Darnall, B., Juurlink, D., Kerns, R.D., Mackey, S., Van Dorsten, B., Humphreys, K., et al. (2019). International
stakeholder community of pain experts and leaders call for urgent action on forced tapering. Pain
Medicine, 20, 429-433.
Goldstein, K., Bastian, L., Duan-Porter, W., Gray, K., Hoggatt, K., Kelly, M., Wilson, S., Humphreys, K., Klap, R.,
Yano, E., & Huang, G. (2019). Accelerating the enrichment of evidence-based care for women and men
Veterans. Women’s Health Issues, 29, S2-S5.
Klap, R., & Humphreys, K. (2019). Designing studies for sex and gender research: how research can derive clinically useful knowledge for women’s health. Women’s Health Issues, 29, S12-S14.
Parthipan, A., Banerjee, I., Humphreys, K., Asch, S.M., Curtin, C., Carroll, I., Hernandez-Boussard, T. (2019).
Predicting inadequate postoperative pain management in depressed patients: A machine learning approach. PLOS One, 14, e0210575.
Shover, C.L., Abraham, A., D’Aunno, T., Friedmann, P., & Humphreys, K. (2019). Impact of the Affordable Care Act on the treatment of psychiatric comorbidities in substance use disorder treatment programs. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 105, 44-50.
Shover, C. L., Davis, C.L., Gordon, S., & Humphreys, K. (2019). Association between medical cannabis laws and
opioid overdose mortality has reversed. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 116, 12624
-12626.
Shover, C.L., & Humphreys, K. (2019). Six policy lessons relevant to cannabis legalization. American Journal of
Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 45, 698-706.
Shover, C.L., & Humphreys, K. (2019). Predictors of availability of long-acting pharmacotherapy for opioid use
disorder. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 204, 107586.
Tas, B., Humphreys, K., McDonald, R., & Strang, J.S. (2019). Does take-home naloxone increase opioid use?
Addiction, 114, 1723-1725.
Vest, N., & Humphreys. (2019). Do we know enough to prescribe opioid agonist therapies to adolescents with
problematic opioid use? A commentary on Camenga et al. (2019). Journal of Studies on Alcohol and
Drugs, 80, 406-407.
Humphreys, K. (2018). Reconciling the present and the future in opioid prescription policy: An ethical
dilemma. Pain Medicine, 19, 1514-1515.
Humphreys, K., & Bickel, W. (2018). Towards a neuroscience of long-term recovery from addiction. JAMA
Psychiatry, 75, 875-876.
Humphreys, K. (2018). How Medicaid can strengthen the national response to the opioid epidemic. American
Journal of Public Health, 108, 589-590.
Humphreys, K. (2018). Of moral judgments and sexual addictions. Addiction, 113, 387-388.
Humphreys, K. (2018). A public health approach to opioid addiction in North America – Author's reply [Letter].
Lancet, 391, 202.
Humphreys, K., Felbab-Brown, V., & Caulkins, J. (2018). Opioids of the masses: stopping an American epidemic from going global. Foreign Affairs, 97, 118-129.
Humphreys, K., West, R., Marsden, J., & Darke, S. (2018). Expanding Addiction’s conflict of interest policy to
cover the cannabis industry [Editorial Note]. Addiction, 113, 205.
Humphreys, K., & Williams, L. (2018). What can the gated community of treatment research offer clinical
practice? Lancet Psychiatry, 5, 295-297.
Abraham, A. J., Andrews, C. M., Grogan, C. M, Pollack, H. A., D’Aunno, T., Humphreys, K., & Friedmann, P.
(2018). State targeted funding and technical assistance to increase access to medication treatment for
opioid use disorder. Psychiatric Services, 69, 448-455.
Andrews, C., Grogan, C.M., Smith, B.T., Pollack, H.A., Humphreys, K., Westlake, M.A., & Friedmann, P. (2018).
Medicaid benefits for addiction treatment expanded after implementation of the Affordable Care Act.
Health Affairs, 37, 1216-1222.
Butler, M., Becker, W., & Humphreys, K. (2018). Protecting privacy, partitioning care? Electronic medical
records and the tradeoffs of patient privacy. Journal of Law, Medicine, and Ethics, 46, 440-453.
Caputi, T., & Humphreys, K. (2018). Medical marijuana users are more likely to use prescription drugs
medically and non-medically. Journal of Addiction Medicine, 12, 295-299.
Darnall, B., & Humphreys, K. (2018). An experimental method for assessing whether marijuana use reduces
opioid use in patients with chronic pain. Addiction, 113, 1552-1553.
Frakt, A., Carroll, A., Pollack, H.A., & Humphreys, K. (2018). The rewards and challenges of writing for a
mass media audience. Health Services Research, 53, 3278-3284.
Hall, W.D., West, R., Marsden, J., Humphreys, K., Neale, J., & Petry, N. (2018). It is premature to expand
access to medicinal cannabis in hopes of solving the US opioid crisis. Addiction, 113, 987-988.
Hah, J., Mackey, S.C., Schmidt, P., McCue, R., Humphreys, K., Trafton, J.,...Carroll, I. (2018). Effect of
perioperative gabapentin on postoperative pain resolution and opioid cessation in a mixed surgical cohort:
A randomized trial. JAMA: Surgery, 153, 303-311.
Lembke, A., & Humphreys, K. (2018). The opioid epidemic as a watershed in addiction medicine education. Academic Psychiatry, 42, 269-272.
Lembke, A., Papac, J., & Humphreys, K. (2018). Our other prescription drug problem. New England Journal
of Medicine, 378, 693-695.
MacNiven, K.H., Jensen, E., Borg, N., Padula, C.B., Humphreys, K., & Knutson, B. (2018). Association of neural response to drug cues with subsequent relapse to stimulant use. JAMA Network Open, e186466.
Pitt, A., Humphreys, K., & Brandeau, M. (2018). Modelling public policy responses to the opioid epidemic. American Journal of Public Health, 108, 1394-1400.
Smith, B., Seaton, K., Andrews, C., Grogan, C.M., Abraham, A., Pollack, H., Friedmann, P., & Humphreys, K. (2018). Benefit requirements for substance use disorder treatment in state health insurance exchanges. American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 44, 426-430.
Wong, J., Jones, N., Timko, C., & Humphreys, K. (2018). Exclusion criteria in research on bipolar disorder treatment: What do we know and what do we need to know? Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications, 9, 130-134.
Young, S., Zheng, K., Chu, L.F., & Humphreys, K. (2018). Internet searches for opioids predict future emergency
department heroin admissions. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 190, 166-169.
Humphreys, K. (2017). Avoiding globalisation of the prescription opioid epidemic. Lancet, 390, 437-439.
Humphreys, K. (2017). A review of the impact of exclusion criteria on the generalizability of schizophrenia treatment research. Clinical Schizophrenia and Related Psychoses, 11. 49-57.
Humphreys, K. (2017). How to deliver a more persuasive message regarding addiction as a medical disorder.
Journal of Addiction Medicine, 11, 174-175.
Humphreys, K., Malenka, R., Knutson, B., & MacCoun, R. (2017). Brains, environments and policy responses
to addiction. Science, 356, 1237-1238.
Cucciare, M., Jamison, A., Combs, A. S., Joshi, G., Cheung, R. C., Rongey, C., Huggins, J., & Humphreys, K.
(2017). Adapting a computer-delivered brief alcohol intervention for veterans with Hepatitis C and
recent alcohol use. Informatics for Health and Social Care, 42, 378-392.
Abraham, A. J., Andrews, C.M., Grogan, C.M., Humphreys, K., Pollack, H.A., & Friedmann, P. (2017).
The Affordable Care Act’s transformation of substance use disorder treatment. American Journal of
Public Health, 107, 31-32.
Finlay, I. G., & Humphreys, K. (2017). Mandatory sobriety programmes for alcohol-involved criminal offenders. Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 110, 52-53.
Friedmann, P.D., Andrews, C.M., & Humphreys, K. (2017). How Affordable Care Act repeal would
worsen the opioid epidemic. New England Journal of Medicine, 376. DOI: 10.1056/NEJMp1700834
Kelly, J.F., Humphreys, K., & Ferri, M. (2017). Alcoholics Anonymous and other 12-step programmes for alcohol dependence (Protocol). Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 11. Art. No.: CD012880. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD012880.
Moberg, C., & Humphreys, K. (2017). Exclusion criteria in treatment research on alcohol, tobacco and illicit drug use disorders: A review and critical analysis. Drug and Alcohol Review, 36, 378-388.
Neale, J., & Humphreys, K. (2017). Addiction Debates: Challenging ideas, challenging ourselves [Editors’ Note]. Addiction, 112, 204.
Schmidt, E. M., Gupta, S., Bowe, T., Ellerbe, L. S., Phelps, T. E., Finney, J.W., Asch, S. M., Humphreys, K., Trafton, J., Vanneman, M., & Harris, A.H.S. (2017). Predictive validity of quality measures for intensive substance use disorder treatment. Substance Abuse, 38, 317-323.
Schmidt, E., Gupta, S., Bowe, T., Ellerbe, L., Phelps, T. E., Finney, J. W., Humphreys, K., Trafton, J.,
Vanneman, M. E., & Harris, A. H. S. (2017). Predictive validity of outpatient follow-up after
detoxification as a quality measure. Journal of Addiction Medicine,11, 205-210.
Sun, E.C., Dixit, A., Humphreys, K., Darnell, B., Baker, L. C., & Mackey, S. (2017). Association between concurrent use of prescription opioids and benzodiazepine with overdose: a retrospective analysis. BMJ, 356, j760.
Humphreys, K. (2016). The liability risks of naloxone access expansion should be the least of our worries. American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 42, 115-116.
Humphreys, K. (2016). Grappling with the generalizability crisis in addiction treatment research. Addiction, 111, 1141-1142.
Bernard, C. L., Brandeau, M.L., Humphreys, K., Bendavid, E., Holodniy, M., Weyant, C., Owens, D. K.,
Goldhaber -Fiebert, J.D. (2016). Cost-Effectiveness of HIV preexposure prophylaxis for injection drug
users in the United States. Annals of Internal Medicine, 29, 143-151.
Caputi, T., & Humphreys, K. (2016). Medicare recipients’ use of medical marijuana [Letter]. Health
Affairs, 35, 1936.
Chen, J., Humphreys, K., Shah, N., & Lembke, A. (2016). High-volume prescribers do not drive Medicare
opioid prescribing. JAMA Internal Medicine, 176, 259-261.
Finney, J.W., Humphreys, K., Kivlahan, D., & Harris, A. H. S. (2016). Excellent patient care processes in poor
hospitals? Why hospital-level and patient-level care quality-outcome relationships differ. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 31, 74-77.
Goldstein, A., Williams, L.M., & Humphreys, K. (2016). A trans-diagnostic review of anxiety disorder comorbidity and the impact of multiple exclusion criteria on studying clinical outcomes in anxiety disorder. Translational Psychiatry, 6, e847.
Grogan, C. M., Andrews, C., Abraham, A., Pollack, H., Smith, B., Humphreys, K., & Friedmann, P. (2016). Survey highlights differences in Medicaid coverage for substance use disorder treatment and opioid use disorder medications. Health Affairs, 35, 2289-2296.
Higgins, S., & Humphreys, K. (2016). Comment on Ersche et al.: Relevant literature to consider [Letter]. Science,
Available on line at
Kalinowski, A., & Humphreys, K. (2016). Governmental standard drink definitions and low-risk drinking guidelines in 37 countries. Addiction, 111, 1293-1298.
Lembke, A., & Humphreys, K. (2016). A call to include people with mental illness and substance use disorders
alongside ‘regular’ smokers in smoking cessation research. Tobacco Control, 25, 261-262.
Lembke, A., Humphreys, K., & Newmark, J. (2016). Weighing the risks and benefits of chronic opioid therapy. American Family Physician, 93, 982-990.
Vederhus, J, Clausen, T., & Humphreys, K. (2016). Assessing understandings of substance use disorders among
Norwegian treatment professionals, patients and general public. BMC Health Services Research, 16, 52.
West, R. J., & Humphreys, K. (2016). Data notes series [Editor’s Note]. Addiction, 111, 1143.
White, W., Galanter, M., Humphreys, K., & Kelly, J. (2016). The paucity of attention to Narcotics Anonymous
in current public, professional and policy responses to rising opioid addiction. Alcoholism Treatment
Quarterly, 34, 437-462.
Humphreys, K. (2015). Griffith Edwards’ rigorous sympathy with Alcoholics Anonymous. Addiction, 110
(Supplement 2), 16-18.
Humphreys, K. (2015). An overdose rescue drug goes mainstream. Health Affairs, 34, 1624-1627.
Humphreys, K. (2015). Addiction treatment professionals are not the gatekeepers of recovery. Substance Use and
Misuse, 50, 1024-1027.
Humphreys, K., Blodgett, J., & Roberts, L. (2015). The exclusion of people with psychiatric disorders from medical research. Journal of Psychiatric Research, 70, 28-32.
Andrews, C. M., Abraham, A. J., Grogan, C. M., Pollack, H.A., Bersamira, C. S., Humphreys, K. & Friedmann, P. (2015). Despite resources from the ACA, most states do little to help addiction treatment programs implement health care reform. Health Affairs, 34, 828-835.
Carroll, I. R., Hah, J., Barelka, P., Wang, C., Wang, B., Gillespie, M., McCue, R., Younger, J., Trafton, J., Humphreys, K., Goodman, S.B., Dirbas, F.M., Whyte, R. I., Donington, J. S., Cannon, W. B. & Mackey, S.C. (2015). Pain duration and resolution following surgery: An inception study. Pain Medicine, 16, 2386-2396.
Finney, J. W., Humphreys, K., & Harris, A.H. S. (2015). What ecologic analyses cannot tell us about medical
marijuana legalization and opioid pain medication mortality [Letter]. JAMA Internal Medicine, 175,
655-656.
Garcia, A., Anderson, B., & Humphreys, K. (2015). Fourth and fifth step groups: A new and growing self-help organization for underserved Latinos with substance use disorders. Alcoholism Treatment Quarterly, 33. 235-243.
Harris, A. H. S., Gupta, S. Bowe, T., Ellerbe, L. S., Phelps, T. E., Rubinsky, A.D., Finney, J.W., Asch, S.M.,
Humphreys, K., Trafton, J. (2015). Predictive validity of two process-of-care quality measures for
residential substance use disorder treatment. Addiction Science & Clinical Practice, 10, 22-27.
Halvorson, M., & Humphreys, K. (2015). A review of the nature and impact of exclusion criteria in depression
treatment outcome research. Annals of Depression and Anxiety, 2, 1058.
Harris, A. H. S., Ellerbe, L., Phelps, T.E., Finney, J.W., Bowe, T., Asch, S., Gupta, S., Humphreys, K., & Trafton,
J. (2015). Examining the specification validity of the HEDIS Quality Measures for substance use
disorders. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 53, 16-21.
Harris, A.H.S., Humphreys, K, & Finney, J.W. (2015). State-Level relationships cannot tell us anything about
individuals [Letter]. American Journal of Public Health, 105, e8.
Trivedi, R., & Humphreys, K. (2015). Participant exclusion criteria in treatment research on neurological disorders: Are unrepresentative samples problematic? Contemporary Clinical Trials, 44, 20-25.
West, R., Marsden, J., Darke, S., Humphreys, K., Miller, P., Hall, W., & Petry, N. (2015). Vote of thanks to
Professor Tom Babor. Addiction, 110, 1060.
Humphreys, K., Blodgett, J. C.& Wagner, T.H. (2014). Estimating the efficacy of Alcoholics Anonymous without self-selection bias: An instrumental variables re-analysis of randomized clinical trials. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 38, 2688-2694.
Humphreys, K., & Frank, R. G. (2014). The Affordable Care Act will revolutionize the care of substance use disorders in the United States. Addiction, 109, 1957-1958.
Humphreys, K. (2014). Action is needed to deter the trumpeting of non-peer-reviewed findings to the media.
Addiction, 109, 691-692.
Humphreys, K., & Lembke, A. (2014). Recovery oriented policy and care systems in the US and UK. Drug and Alcohol Review, 33, 13-18.
Babor, T., Petry, N., Hall, W., Humphreys, K., & Miller, P. (2014). Addiction Editors respond to Mr. Leverton. Addiction, 109, 1209-1215.
Hah, J., Mackey, S., Barelka, P., Wang, C., Wang, B., Gillespie, M., McCue, R., Younger, J., Trafton, J., Humphreys, K., Goodman, S.B., Dirbas, F.M., Schmidt, P.C., & Carroll, I.R. (2014). Self-loathing aspects of depression reduce postoperative opioid cessation rate. Pain Medicine, 15, 954-964.
Hoertel, N., Falissard, B., Humphreys, K., Gorwood, P., Seigneurie, A-S, & Limosin, F. (2014). Do clinical trials
of treatment of alcohol dependence adequately enroll participants with co-occurring independent mood and anxiety disorders? An analysis of data from the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions (NESARC). Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 75, 231-237.
Humphreys, K. (2013). Can we know that addiction treatment has been improved without evidence of better
Patient outcomes? Addiction, 108, 1158-1159.
Humphreys, K., Maisel, N. C., Blodgett, J. C., & Finney, J.W. (2013). Representativeness of patients enrolled in
influential clinical trials: A comparison of substance dependence with other medical disorders. Journal of
Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 74, 889-893.
Humphreys, K., Maisel, N.C., Blodgett, J.C., Fuh, I.L., & Finney, J.W. (2013). Extent and reporting of patient non-enrollment in influential randomized clinical trials, 2002-2010. JAMA Internal Medicine, 173, 1029-1031.
Babor, T., Hall, W., Humphreys, K., Miller, P., Petry, N. & West, R. (2013). Who is responsible for the public’s
health? The role of the alcohol industry in the WHO global strategy to reduce the harmful use of alcohol.
Addiction, 108, 2045-2047.
Huemer, J., Voelkl-Kernstock, S., Karnik, N, Denny, K.G., Granditsch, E., Humphreys, K., Plattner, B., Friedrich,
M., & Steiner, H. (2013). Personality and psychopathology in African unaccompanied minors: Resilience
and vulnerability. Child Psychiatry and Human Development, 44, 39-50.
Kilmer, B., & Humphreys, K. (2013). Losing your license to drink: The radical South Dakota approach to heavy
drinkers who threaten public safety. Brown Journal of World Affairs, 20, 267-282.
Laudet, A., & Humphreys, K. (2013). Promoting recovery in an evolving policy context. Journal of Substance
Abuse Treatment, 45, 126-133.
Maisel, N. C., Blodgett, J., Wilbourne, P.L., Humphreys, K., & Finney, J.W. (2013). Meta-analysis of naltrexone
and acamprosate for treating alcohol dependence: When and for what are these medications most helpful?
Addiction, 108, 275-293.
Humphreys, K. (2012). Will the Obama Administration adopt a more health-oriented response to drug policy?
Journal of Drug Policy Analysis, 5, Article 3 DOI: 10.1515/1941-2851.1050.
Humphreys, K. (2012). What can we learn from the failure of yet another “miracle cure” for addiction?
Addiction, 107, 237-239.
Humphreys, K. (2012). Federal policy on criminal offenders who have substance use disorders: How can we
maximize public health and public safety? Substance Abuse, 33, 5-8.
Humphreys, K., & Piot, P. (2012). Scientific evidence alone is not sufficient basis for health policy.
British Medical Journal, 344, e1316.
Carroll, I.R.., Barelka, P., Wang, C. K.M., Wang, B.M, Gillespie, M. J., McCue, R., Younger, J.,Trafton, J.,
Humphreys, K., Goodman, S. B., Dirbas, F.M., Whyte, R.I., Donington, J.S., Cannon, W. B., & Mackey,
S. C. (2012). A pilot cohort study of the determinants of longitudinal opioid use following surgery, Anesthesia & Analgesia, 115, 694-702.
Cunningham, J.A., Neighbors, C., Wild, T. C. & Humphreys, K. (2012). Ultra-brief intervention for problem
drinkers: Results from a randomized controlled trial. PLOS One, 7, e48003. doi:
10.1371/journal.pone.0048003.
Harris, A. H. S., Oliva, E., Bowe, T., Humphreys, K., Kivlahan, D. R., & Trafton, J. (2012). Pharmacotherapy of
alcohol use disorders in the Veterans Health Administration: Patterns of receipt and persistence.
Psychiatric Services, 63, 679-685.
Strang, J. S., Babor, T., Caulkins, J., Foxcroft, D., Fischer, B., & Humphreys, K. (2012). Drug policy and the
public good: Evidence for effective interventions. The Lancet, 378, 71-83.
Cunningham, J. A., Neighbors, C., Wild, T.C. & Humphreys, K. (2012). Normative misperceptions about alcohol
use in a general population sample of problem drinkers from a large metropolitan city. Alcohol and
Alcoholism, 47, 63-66.
Lembke, A., & Humphreys, K. (2012). Moderation Management: A mutual help alternative for non-dependent
problem drinkers. Journal of Groups in Addiction and Recovery, 7,130-141.
Humphreys, K., Wagner, T.H., & Gage, M. (2011). If substance use disorder treatment more than offsets its costs, why don’t more medical centers want to provide it?: A budget impact analysis in the Veterans Health Administration. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 41, 243-251.
Humphreys, K. & McLellan, A. T. (2011). A policy-oriented review of strategies for improving the outcomes of
services for substance use disorder patients. Addiction, 106, 2058-2066.
Addiction Editorial Team (8 authors total including Humphreys, K). (2011). Addiction’s priorities when
evaluating manuscripts. Addiction, 106, 463-465.
Cunningham, J.A., Wild, T.C., & Humphreys, K. (2011). Who uses online interventions for problem drinkers?
Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 41, 261-264.
DuPont, R. L., & Humphreys, K. (2011). A new paradigm for long-term recovery from addiction. Substance
Abuse, 32, 1-6.
Finney, J. W., Humphreys, K., Harris, A. S. (2011). Cross-level bias and variations in care. JAMA, 306, 2096
-2097.
Finney, J. W., Humphreys, K., Kivlahan, D. R., & Harris, A. H. S. (2011). Why health care process performance
measures can have different relationships to outcomes for patients and hospitals: Understanding the ecological fallacy. American Journal of Public Health, 101, 1635-1642.
Humphreys, K. (2010). Our map should correspond with the territory. Addiction, 105, 2054-2056
Humphreys, K. (2010). But patients like mine were excluded from that trial!: A challenge to evidence-based
alcohol treatment. New Directions in the Study of Alcohol, 34, 32-46.
Humphreys, K. (2010). Something must be done!: But is Moore right that something can be worse than nothing in
alcohol control policy? Alcohol and Alcoholism, 45, 409-411.
Humphreys, K., & McLellan, A. T. (2010). Brief intervention, treatment and recovery support services for
Americans who have substance use disorders: An overview of policy in the Obama Administration.
Psychological Services, 7, 275-284.
Barnett, P., Trafton, J., Su, P., & Humphreys, K. (2010). The cost-effectiveness of concordance with opiate substitution treatment practice guidelines. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment,39, 141-149.
Cunningham, J. A., Wild, T. C., Cordingley, J., van Mierlo, T., & Humphreys, K. (2010). Twelve month follow-up results from a randomized controlled trial of a brief personalized feedback intervention for problem drinkers. Alcohol and Alcoholism, 45, 258-262.
Drugs and Public Policy Group (12 authors total; Humphreys, K. was in senior author group). (2010). Drug policy
and the public good: A summary of the book. Addiction, 105, 1137-1145.
Harris, A.S., Humphreys, K., Bowe, T., Tiet, Q., & Finney, J. W. (2010). Does meeting the HEDIS substance abuse treatment engagement criteria predict patient outcomes? Journal of Behavioral Health Services Research, 37, 25-39.
Harris, A. H. S., Kivlahan, D., Bowe, T., & Humphreys, K. (2010). Pharmacotherapy of alcohol use disorders in the Veterans Health Administration. Psychiatric Services. 61, 392-398.
Kelly, J. F., Kahler, C., & Humphreys, K. (2010). Assessing why substance use disorder patients refuse to attend or drop out of 12-step self-help groups: The REASONS questionnaire. Addiction Research and Theory, 18, 316-325.
Mancino, M., Curran, G., Han, X., Allee, E., Humphreys, K., & Booth. B. (2010). Predictors of attrition from a
national sample of methadone maintenance patients. American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 36,
155-160.
Melberg, H. O., & Humphreys, K. (2010). Ineligibility and refusal to participate in randomised trials of treatments for drug dependence Drug and Alcohol Review, 29, 193-201.
Humphreys, K. (2009). Biography. American Psychologist, 64, 710-712.
Humphreys, K. (2009). Responding to the psychological impact of war on the Iraqi people and U.S. veterans: Mixing icing, praying for cake. American Psychologist, 64, 712-723.
Humphreys, K. (2009). Searching where the light is worse: Overemphasizing genes and underplaying environment in the quest to reduce substance misuse. Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, 85, 357-358.
Humphreys, K., Harris, A.H.S., & Kivlahan, D. (2009). Performance monitoring in the Department of Veterans Affairs. American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 35, 123-127.
Al-Hasnawi, S.M., Aqrawi, R., Sadik, S., & Humphreys, K. (2009). Iraqi psychiatrists’ perceptions of drug use
among their patients. Psychiatric Services, 60, 728.
Aqrawi, R., & Humphreys, K. (2009). Responding to rising substance misuse in Iraq. Substance Use and Misuse, 44, 1744-1748.
Cucciare, M. A., Weingardt, K. R., & Humphreys, K. (2009). How Internet technology can improve the quality of care for substance use disorders. Current Drug Abuse Reviews, 2, 256-262.
Cunningham, J., Humphreys, K., Wild, T. C., Cordingley J., & van Mierlo T. (2009). A randomized controlled trial of Internet-delivered intervention for alcohol abuse. Addiction, 104, 2023-2032.
Garnick, D.W., Lee, M. T., Horgan, C.M., Acevedo, A., & Washington Circle Public Sector Workgroup (K Humphreys part of authorial group). (2009). Adapting Washington Circle performance measures for public sector substance abuse treatment systems. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 36, 265-277.
Harris, A.S., Humphreys, K., Bowe, T., Kivlahan, D., & Finney, J. W. (2009). Measuring the quality of substance use disorder treatment: Evaluating the validity of the VA continuity of care performance measure. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 36, 294-305.
Harris, A.S., Humphreys, K., Bowe, T. & Finney, J. W. (2009). HEDIS initiation and engagement quality
measures of substance use disorder care: Impacts of setting and health care specialty. Population Health
Management, 12, 191-196.
Harris, A. H. S., Kivlahan, D., Bowe, T., Finney, J.W. & Humphreys, K. (2009). Developing and validating process measures of health care: An application to alcohol use disorder treatment. Medical Care, 47, 1244-1250.
McKay, J. R., Carise, D., Dennis, M. L., DuPont, R., Humphreys, K. et al. (2009). Extending the benefits of addiction treatment: Practical strategies for continuing care and recovery. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 36, 127-130.
Schutte, K., Yano, E. M., Kilbourne, A. M., Wickrama, B., Kirchner, & Humphreys, K. (2009). Organizational characteristics of primary care practices that manage patients’ alcohol use disorders. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 36, 435-445.
Whelan, P.J., Marshall, E. J., Ball, D. M., & Humphreys, K. (2009). The role of AA sponsors: A pilot study. Alcohol and Alcoholism, 44, 416-422.
Humphreys, K. (2008). Can Dr. Orford’s patient be saved? Addiction, 103, 887-888.
Humphreys, K., Harris, A.S., & Weingardt, K. (2008). Subject eligibility criteria can substantially influence the results of alcohol treatment outcome research. Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 69, 757-764.
Humphreys, K., Trafton, J. A., & Oliva, E. M. (2008). Does following research-derived practice guidelines improve opiate dependent patients’ outcomes under everyday practice conditions?: Results of the Multisite Opiate Substitution Treatment (MOST) Study. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 34, 173-179.
Cunningham, J. A., Neighbors, C., Wild, T.C., & Humphreys, K. (2008). Ultra-brief intervention for problem drinkers: Research protocol. BMC Public Health, 8, 298.
Fogel, J., Ribisl, K. M., Morgan, P. D., Humphreys, K., & Lyons, E. J. (2008). The under-representation of African-Americans in online cancer support groups Journal of the National Medical Association, 100, 705-712.
Greenfield, T. K., Stoneking, B. C., Sundby, E., Bond, J., & Humphreys, K. (2008). A randomized trial of a mental health consumer-managed alternative to civil commitment. American Journal of Community Psychology, 42, 135-144.
Lillis, J., Gifford, E., Humphreys, K., & Moos, R. (2008). Assessing spirituality/religiosity in the treatment environment: The treatment spirituality/religiosity scale. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 35, 427-433.
Pistrang, N., Barker, C., & Humphreys, K. (2008). A review of mutual help interventions for mental health. American Journal of Community Psychology, 42, 110-121.
Humphreys, K., & Moos, R. (2007). Encouraging posttreatment self-help group involvement to reduce demand for continuing care services: Two-year clinical and utilization. Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research, 31, 64-68.
(Reprinted. (2007). Influential publications section of Focus: The Journal of Lifelong Learning in Psychiatry, 5, 193-198.)
Humphreys, K., Weingardt, K., & Harris, A. (2007). The influence of subject eligibility criteria on compliance with National Institutes of Health guidelines for inclusion of women, minorities and children in treatment research. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 31, 988-995.
Harris, A.S., Humphreys, K., & Finney, J.W. (2007). Veterans Affairs facility performance on Washington Circle Indicators and casemix-adjusted treatment effectiveness. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 33, 333-339.
Karlin, B., & Humphreys, K. (2007). Improving Medicare coverage of psychological services for older Americans. American Psychologist, 62, 637-649.
Trafton, J.A., Humphreys, K., Harris A.S., & Oliva, E. (2007). Patients attending opioid substitution treatment clinics that adhere more closely to clinical practice guidelines have better one-year substance use and mental health outcomes. Journal of Behavioral Health Services Research, 34, 260-271.
Wagner, T. H., Harris, K. M., Federman, B., Dai, L., Luna, Y. Humphreys, K. (2007). Prevalence of drug, alcohol and cigarette use among veterans and comparable non-veterans from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health. Psychological Services, 4, 149-157.
Gifford, E., & Humphreys, K. (2007). The psychological science of addiction. Addiction, 102, 352-361.
Trafton, J. A., Tracy, S. W., Oliva, E. M., & Humphreys, K. (2007). Different components of opioid-substitution treatment predict outcomes of patients with and without a parent with substance use problems. Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 68, 165-172.
Tracy, S., Trafton, J., Weingardt, K., Aton, E., & Humphreys (2007). How are substance use disorders addressed in VA psychiatric and primary care settings?: Results of a national survey. Psychiatric Services, 58, 266-269.
Humphreys, K. (2006). Swimming to the horizon: Reflections on a special series. Addiction, 101, 1238-1240.
Humphreys, K. (2006). The trials of Alcoholics Anonymous. Addiction, 101, 617-618.
Humphreys, K., & Sadik, S. (2006). Improving mental health services in Iraq. Behavioral Healthcare, 26, 34-35.
Humphreys, K., & Wilbourne, P. (2006). Knitting together some ripping yarns. Addiction, 101, 4-5.
Cunningham, J. A., Selby, P. L., Kypri, K. & Humphreys, K. (2006). Access to the Internet among drinkers, smokers and illicit drug users: Is it a barrier to the provision of interventions on the World Wide Web? Medical Informatics and the Internet in Medicine, 31, 53-58.
Cunningham, J. A., Humphreys, K., Koski-Jännes, A, Kypri, K. & van Mierlo, T. (2006). Formative evaluation and three-month follow-up of an online personalized assessment feedback intervention for problem drinkers. Journal of Medical Internet Research, 8, e5(pp1-9).
Ilgen, M., Trafton, J. A., & Humphreys, K. (2006). Response to methadone maintenance treatment of opiate dependent patients with and without pain. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 82, 187-193.
Klaw, E., Horst, D., & Humphreys, K. (2006). Inquirers, triers and buyers of an alcohol harm reduction self-help organization. Addiction Research and Theory, 14, 527-535.
Trafton, J. A., Minkel, J., & Humphreys, K. (2006). Post traumatic stress disorder does not adversely affect
substance use outcomes in Opioid Substitution Treatment (OST). Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 67, 228- 235.
Trafton, J. A., Minkel, J., & Humphreys, K. (2006). Determining effective methadone doses for individual opioid dependent patients: Factors associated with methadone tolerance. PLOS Medicine, 3, 80-88.
Villafranca, S. W., McKellar, J. D., Trafton, J. A., & Humphreys, K. (2006). Predictors of retention in methadone programs: A signal detection analysis. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 83, 218-224.
Humphreys, K. (2005). From addiction treatment research reviews to better widgets. Addiction, 100, 751-754.
Humphreys, K. (2005). Horizons of the treatment enterprise. Addiction, 100, 445-446.
Humphreys, K., Weingardt, K. R., Horst, D., Joshi, A. A., & Finney, J. W. (2005). Prevalence and predictors of research participant eligibility criteria in alcohol treatment outcome studies, 1970-1998. Addiction, 100, 1249-1257.
Cunningham, J.A., Humphreys, K., Koski-Jännes, A., & Cordingley, J. (2005). Internet and paper self-help materials for problem drinking: Is there an additive effect? Addictive Behaviors, 30, 1517-1523.
Harris, A., Thoreson, C., Humphreys, K., & Faul, J. (2005). Does expressive writing affect asthma?: A randomized trial. Psychosomatic Medicine, 67, 130-136.
Mikami, A. Y., Boucher, M. A., & Humphreys, K. (2005). Prevention of peer rejection through a classroom-level intervention in middle school. Journal of Primary Prevention, 26, 5-23.
Möggi, F., Giovanoli, A., Sutter, M., & Humphreys, K. (2005). Validity and reliability of the German version of the Short Understanding of Substance Abuse Scales. European Addiction Research, 11, 172-129.
Trafton, J. A., Humphreys, K., Kivlahan, D., & Willenbring, M. (2005). Barriers to implementation of evidence-based practice: The case of methadone maintenance. Journal of Addictive Diseases, 24, 93-108.
Villafranca, S., Weingardt, K. R., Cunningham, J., & Humphreys, K. (2005). Providing normative feedback on the Internet to stimulate self-evaluation of alcohol, tobacco and cannabis use. International Journal of Self-Help and Self-Care, 3, 87-101.
Humphreys, K. (2004). A few apologies, but no regrets. Addiction, 99, 155-156.
Humphreys, K. (2004). Tale telling in an alcohol mutual help organization. New Directions in Alcohol Studies, 29, 33-44.
Humphreys, K., Macus, S., Stewart, E., & Oliva, E. (2004). Expanding self-help group participation in culturally diverse urban areas: Media approaches to leveraging referent power. Journal of Community Psychology, 32, 413-424.
Humphreys, K., Wing, S., McCarty, D., Chappel, J., Gallant, L., Haberle, B., Horvath, A. T., Kaskutas L.A.,
Kirk, T., Kivlahan, D., Laudet, A., McCrady, B.S., McLellan, A.T., Morgenstern, J., Townsend, M.,
& Weiss, R. (2004). Self-help organizations for alcohol and drug problems: Towards evidence
-based practice and policy. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 26, 151-158.
(Reprinted (2005). Drug and Alcohol Findings London: National Addiction Center)
(Reprinted in Greek translation (2006). Society and Mental Health)
McKellar, J. D., Piette, J.D., & Humphreys, K. (2004). Depression increases diabetic symptoms by complicating patients’ self-care adherence. Diabetes Educator, 30, 485-492.
Trafton, J. A., Oliva, E. M., Horst, D. A., Minkel, J.D., & Humphreys, K. (2004). Treatment needs associated with pain in substance dependent patients: Implications for concurrent treatment. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 73, 23-31.
Humphreys, K. (2003). A research-based analysis of the Moderation Management controversy. Psychiatric
Services, 54, 621-622.
Humphreys, K. (2003). Systems for planning and delivering services for alcohol-related problems. Addiction, 98,
1362-1363.
Humphreys, K. (2003). Initial lessons for psychologists who wish to use research to improve federal policies concerning addictive and psychiatric disorders. Community Psychologist, 36, 41-42.
Humphreys, K. (2003). Do participants in alcoholism treatment outcome studies resemble patients seen in everyday practice? Psychiatric Services, 54, 1576.
Humphreys, K., Trafton, J., Wagner, T. (2003). Estimating the cost of Institutional Review Board procedures in multi-center treatment research. Annals of Internal Medicine, 139, 77.
Humphreys, K., & Tucker, J. A. (2003). Shades of grey: Understanding consumer demand for alcohol-related services in a pluralistic marketplace. Frontlines, June, 7-8.
Forman, R. F., Humphreys, K., & Tonigan, J.S. (2003). The marriage of drug abuse treatment and 12-step strategies. Science and Practice Perspectives, 2, 52-54.
Klaw, E., Luft, S., & Humphreys, K. (2003). Characteristics and motives of problem drinkers seeking help from Moderation Management self-help groups. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 10, 385-390.
Lieberman, M. A., Golant, M., Giese-Davis, J., Benjamin, H., Humphreys, K., Kronenwetter, C., Russo, S., Winzelberg, A., & Spiegel, D. (2003). Electronic support groups for breast carcinoma: A clinical trial of effectiveness. Cancer, 97, 920-925.
McKellar, J. D., Stewart, E., & Humphreys, K. (2003). AA involvement and positive alcohol-related outcomes: Cause, consequence, or just a correlate? Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 71, 302-308.
Owen P., Slaymaker, V., Tonigan, J. S., McCrady, B. S., & Epstein, E. E., Kaskutas, L. A., Humphreys, K., & Miller, W. R. (2003). Participation in Alcoholics Anonymous: Intended and unintended change mechanisms. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 27, 524-532.
Humphreys, K., & Horst, D. (2002). Moving from inpatient to residential substance abuse treatment in the Veterans Health Administration. Psychiatric Services, 53, 927.
Humphreys, K., & Tucker, J. (2002). Towards more responsive and effective intervention systems for alcohol-related problems. Addiction, 97, 126-132.
Humphreys, K., & Tucker, J. (2002). Romance, realism, and the future of alcohol intervention systems. Addiction, 97, 139-140.
Kaskutas, L. A., Bond, J. A., & Humphreys, K. (2002). Social networks as mediators of the effect of Alcoholics Anonymous. Addiction, 97,891-900.
Humphreys, K., & Klaw, E. (2001). Can targeting non-dependent problem drinkers and providing internet-based services expand access to assistance for alcohol problems?: A study of the Moderation Management self-help/mutual aid organization. Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 62, 528-532.
Humphreys, K., & Moos, R. H. (2001). Can encouraging substance abuse inpatients to participate in self-help groups reduce demand for health care?: A quasi-experimental study. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 25, 711-716.
Mankowski, E., Humphreys, K., & Moos, R. H. (2001). Individual and contextual predictors of involvement in twelve step self-help groups after substance abuse treatment. American Journal of Community Psychology, 29, 537-563.
Ouimette, P. C., Humphreys, K., Moos, R. H., Finney, J. W., Cronkite, R. C., & Federman, B.
(2001). Self-help group participation among substance abuse disorder patients with posttraumatic stress disorder. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 20, 25-32.
QUERI Substance Abuse Module and Executive Committee (K. Humphreys second author). (2001). Treatment for opiate dependence. VA Practice Matters, 6, 1-6.
Cunningham, J. A., Humphreys, K., Koski-Jännes, A. (2000). Providing personalized assessment feedback for problem drinking on the internet: A pilot project. Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 61, 794-798.
Humphreys, K. (2000). On giving birth: Goodbye and thank you from the associate editor. International Journal of Self-Help and Self-Care, 1, 193-194.
Humphreys, K., & Weingardt, K. R. (2000). Assessing readmission to substance abuse treatment as an indicator of outcome and program performance. Psychiatric Services, 51, 1568-1569.
Humphreys, K. (2000). Beyond the mental health clinic: New settings and activities for clinical psychology internships. Professional Psychology, 31, 300-304.
Humphreys, K. (2000). Community narratives and personal stories in Alcoholics Anonymous. Journal of Community Psychology, 28, 495-506.
Humphreys, K., Winzelberg, A., & Klaw, E. (2000). Psychologists’ ethical responsibilities in internet-based groups: Issues, strategies, and a call for dialogue. Professional Psychology, 31, 493-496.
(Reprinted (2004). In. D. N. Bersoff (Ed.), Ethical conflicts in psychology, 3rd edition.
Washington, DC: American Psychological Association).
Humphreys, K., & Weisner, C. (2000). Use of exclusion criteria in selecting research subjects and its effect on the generalizability of alcohol treatment outcome studies. American Journal of Psychiatry, 157, 588-594.
(Reprinted (2002). In L. Spaniol (Ed.), A comprehensive guide for integrated treatment of people with dual disorders. Boston, MA: Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation).
Klaw, E., Huebsch, P. D., & Humphreys, K. (2000). Communication patterns in an on-line mutual help group for problem drinkers. Journal of Community Psychology, 28, 535-546.
Klaw, E. & Humphreys, K. (2000). Life stories of Moderation Management mutual help group members. Contemporary Drug Problems, 27, 779-803.
Finney, J.W., Moos, R.H., & Humphreys, K. (1999). A comparative evaluation of substance abuse treatment: II. Linking proximal outcomes of 12-step and cognitive-behavioral treatment to substance use outcomes. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 23, 537-547.
Humphreys, K. (1999). Professional interventions that facilitate 12-step self-help group involvement. Alcohol Health and Research World, 23, 93-98.
Humphreys, K., Dearmin Huebsch, P., Moos, R. H., & Finney, J.W. (1999). A comparative evaluation of substance abuse treatment: V. Treatment can enhance the effectiveness of self-help groups. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 23, 558-563.
Humphreys, K., Dearmin Huebsch, P., Moos, R. H., & Suchinsky, R. T. (1999). The transformation of the VA substance abuse treatment system. Psychiatric Services, 50, 1399-1401.
Humphreys, K., Mankowski, E., Moos, R. H., & Finney, J.W. (1999). Do enhanced friendship networks and active coping mediate the effect of self-help groups on substance use? Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 21, 54-60.
Humphreys, K., & Ribisl, K. (1999). The case for a partnership with self-help groups. Public Health Reports, 114,
322-327.
Kaskutas, L. A., Weisner, C., Lee, M., & Humphreys, K. (1999). Alcoholics Anonymous affiliation at treatment intake among Whites and African Americans. Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 60, 810-816.
Moos, R. H., Humphreys, K., Ouimette, P. C., & Finney, J. W. (1999). Evaluating and improving VA substance abuse patients’ care. American Journal of Medical Quality, 14, 45-54.
Ronel, N., & Humphreys, K. (1999). World view transformations of Narcotics Anonymous members in Israel. International Journal of Self-Help and Self-Care, 1, 107-122.
Winzelberg, A., & Humphreys, K. (1999). Should patients’ religious beliefs and practices influence clinicians’ referral to 12-step self-help groups?: Evidence from a study of 3,018 male substance abuse patients. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 67, 790-794.
Humphreys, K. (1998). Can addiction-related self-help/mutual aid groups lower demand for professional substance abuse treatment? Social Policy, 29, 13-17.
Humphreys, K., Kaskutas, L. A., & Weisner, C. (1998). The Alcoholics Anonymous Affiliation Scale: Development, reliability and norms for diverse treated and untreated populations. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 22, 974-978.
Humphreys, K., & Rosenheck, R. (1998). Treatment involvement and outcomes for four subtypes of homeless veterans. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 68, 285-294.
Humphreys, K., Kaskutas, L. A., & Weisner, C. (1998). The relationship of pre-treatment Alcoholics Anonymous affiliation with problem severity, social resources, and treatment history. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 49, 123-131.
Humphreys, K. (1997). Clinicians’ referral and matching of substance abuse patients to self-help groups after treatment. Psychiatric Services, 48, 1445-1449.
Humphreys, K. (1997). Self-help/mutual aid organizations: The view from Mars. Substance Use and Misuse, 32, 2105-2109.
Humphreys, K. (1997). Money and the mission of clinical psychology. American Psychologist, 52, 182.
Humphreys, K. (1997). Individual and social benefits mutual aid/self-help groups. Social Policy, 27 12-19.
Humphreys, K., Baisden, K., Moos, R. H., & Piette, J. D. (1997). Treatment of VA inpatients with diagnoses of substance abuse. Psychiatric Services, 48, 171.
Humphreys, K., Hamilton, E. G., Moos, R. H., & Suchinsky, R. T. (1997). Policy-relevant program evaluation in a national substance abuse treatment system. Journal of Mental Health Administration, 24, 373-385.
Humphreys, K., Moos, R. H., & Cohen, C. (1997). Social and community resources and long-term recovery from treated and untreated alcoholism. Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 58, 231-238.
Humphreys, K., & Noke, J. M. (1997). The influence of posttreatment mutual help group participation on the friendship networks of substance abuse patients. American Journal of Community Psychology, 25, 1-17.
Kyrouz, E. M., & Humphreys, K. (1997). A review of research on the effectiveness of self-help/mutual aid groups. International Journal of Psychosocial Rehabilitation, 1, 12-17.
(Reprinted (1998). In B. J. White & E. J. Madara (Eds.), The self-help sourcebook, 6th edition., pp.71-82, Denville, NJ: American Self-Help Clearinghouse. Updated and reprinted (2002). w/C.Loomis In B. J. White & E. J. Madara (Eds.), The self-help sourcebook, 7th edition. Denville, NJ: American Self-Help Clearinghouse)
Kyrouz, E. M., & Humphreys, K. (1997). Do health care workplaces affect treatment environments? Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 7, 105-118.
Humphreys, K. (1996). Clinical psychologists as psychotherapists: History, future, and alternatives. American Psychologist, 51, 190-197.
Humphreys, K. (1996). World view change in Adult Children of Alcoholics/Al-Anon self-help groups: Reconstructing the alcoholic family. International Journal of Group Psychotherapy, 46, 255-263.
Humphreys, K., Greenbaum, M. A., Noke, J. M., & Finney, J. W. (1996). Reliability, validity, and normative data for a short version of the Understanding of Alcoholism scale. Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 10, 38-44.
Humphreys, K., & Moos, R. (1996). Reduced substance abuse-related health care costs among voluntary participants in Alcoholics Anonymous. Psychiatric Services, 47, 709-713.
Humphreys, K., Moos, R. H., & Finney, J. W. (1996). Life domains, Alcoholics Anonymous, and role incumbency in the 3-Year course of problem drinking. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 184, 475-481.
Humphreys, K., Moos, R. H., & Hamilton, E. G. (1996). Psychiatric services in VA substance abuse programs. Psychiatric Services, 47, 1203.
Humphreys, K., Noke, J. M., & Moos, R. H. (1996). Recovering substance abuse staff members'
professional roles and beliefs about addiction. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 13, 75-78.
Humphreys, K., Phibbs, C. S., & Moos, R. H. (1996). Addressing self-selection effects in evaluations of mutual help groups and professional mental health services: An introduction to two-stage sample selection models. Evaluation and Program Planning, 19, 301-308.
Kyrouz, E. M., & Humphreys, K. (1996). Do psychiatrically disabled people benefit from participation in self-help/mutual aid organizations?: A research review. Community Psychologist, 29, 21-25.
Humphreys, K., & Hamilton, E. G. (1995). Advocacy and self-reliance: The resurgence of mutual help organizations in African American communities. Social Policy, 25, 24-32.
Humphreys, K., & Kaskutas, L. A. (1995). World views of Alcoholics Anonymous, Women for Sobriety, and Adult Children of Alcoholics/Al-Anon Mutual Help Groups. Addiction Research, 3, 231-243.
Humphreys, K., Moos, R. H., & Finney, J. W. (1995). Two pathways out of drinking problems without professional treatment. Addictive Behaviors, 20, 427-441.
Humphreys, K., & Rosenheck, R. (1995). Sequential validation of cluster analytic subtypes of homeless veterans. American Journal of Community Psychology, 25, 75-98.
Humphreys, K., Finney, J. W., & Moos, R. H. (1994). Applying a stress and coping framework to research on mutual help organizations. Journal of Community Psychology, 22, 312-327.
Humphreys, K., Mavis, B. E., Stöffelmayr, B. E. (1994). Are twelve step programs appropriate for disenfranchised groups?: Evidence from a study of posttreatment mutual help group involvement. Prevention in Human Services, 11, 165-180.
Humphreys, K., & Rappaport, J. (1994). Researching self-help/mutual aid groups and organizations: Many roads, one journey. Applied and Preventive Psychology, 3, 217-231.
Kennedy, M., & Humphreys, K. (1994). Understanding world view transformation in mutual help groups. Prevention in Human Services, 11, 181-198.
Humphreys, K. (1993). Psychotherapy and the twelve step approach for substance abusers: The limits of integration. Psychotherapy, 30, 207-213.
Humphreys, K. (1993). Expanding the pluralist revolution. Psychotherapy, 30, 176-177.
Humphreys, K., Fernandes, L. O. L., Gano-Phillips, S., Bhana, A., & Fincham, F. D. (1993). A community oriented approach to divorce intervention. Family Journal: Counseling and Therapy for Couples and Families, 1, 4-11.
Humphreys, K., & Rappaport, J. (1993). From community mental health to drugs: A study in the definition of social problems. American Psychologist, 48, 892-901.
(Reprinted (1994). Von der bewegung für gemeindenaha psychsoziale versorgung zum krieg den drogen: Eins studie über die definition sozialer probleme. Psychologie und Gesellschafts Kritik, 17, 79-106.)
Humphreys, K., & Woods, M. (1993). Researching mutual help group affiliation in a segregated society. Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 29, 181-201.
(Reprinted (1994). In T. J. Powell (Ed.), Understanding the self-help organization: Frameworks and Findings (pp.62-87). Newbury Park, CA: Sage.)
Mavis, B. E., Humphreys, K., & Stöffelmayr, B. (1993). Treatment needs and outcomes of two subtypes of homeless persons who abuse substances. Hospital and Community Psychiatry, 44, 1185-1187.
Benishek, L., Bieschke, K., Stöffelmayr, B. E., Mavis, B. E., & Humphreys, K. (1992) Gender differences in depression and anxiety among alcoholics. Journal of Substance Abuse, 4, 235-245.
Humphreys, K., Fernandes, L. O. L., & Fincham, F. D. (1992). The whole is greater than the sum of the parts II: A Group intervention for parents from divorced families. Family Psychologist, 8, 19-20.
Fernandes, L. O. L., Humphreys, K., & Fincham, F. D. (1991). The whole is greater than the sum of the parts I: A group intervention for children from divorced families. Family Psychologist, 7, 26-28.
Humphreys, K., Mavis, B. E., & Stöffelmayr, B. E. (1991). Factors predicting attendance at self-help groups after substance abuse treatment: Preliminary findings. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 59, 591-593.
Mavis, B. E., Humphreys, K., & Stöffelmayr, B. E. (1990). Who participates in post treatment self-help groups? Alcohol and Addiction Dispatch, 2, 8-15.
Stöffelmayr, B. E., Benishek, L. A., Humphreys, K., Lee, J. A., & Mavis, B. E. (1989). Substance abuse prognosis with an additional psychiatric diagnosis: Understanding the relationship. Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 21, 145-152.
WRITING/DISSEMINATION FOR A POPULAR AUDIENCE:
I am a regular contributor to Washington Post, for which I have written about 100 articles, which are collected here
I have also written articles that were published in New York Times, Wall Street Journal, USA Today, New York Magazine, Newsweek, The Week, The Hill, STAT/Boston Globe, The Guardian (UK), The Telegraph (UK), Sacramento Bee, Huffington Post, San Francisco Chronicle, Times Higher Education (UK), San Jose Mercury News, American Prospect, Washington Monthly, Mother Jones, Crossbow (UK) and other mass media outlets.
My research/policy analysis have been covered by/I’ve been quoted in New York Times, USA Today, Washington Post, The New Yorker, CNN, Christian Science Monitor, The Atlantic, Boston Globe, Forbes, U.S. News and World Report, CBS Today Show, Wall Street Journal, Time, Kaiser Health News, New York Magazine, Vox, GQ, Weekly Standard, The Week, Esquire, BBC World, ITV, Telegraph, Guardian, London Evening Standard, Sky News, Australian Age, Newsweek/Daily Beast, Slate, Bloomberg News, Fox, Bloomberg Television, Al Jazeera, The Week, The Economist, Salon, Washington Times, PBS Frontline, PBS NOVA, Der Spiegel, Der Zeit, Bild, ABC News, NBC News, L.A. Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Mother Jones, San Jose Mercury News, Radio Africa, New Republic, ProPublica, El País, El Daily, The American Magazine, Marketplace, Prevention Magazine, C-SPAN, NPR, NZZ and other mass media outlets.
Selected Examples of recent writing for a popular audience (N.B.: editors, not authors, pick titles)
Growth in treatment has led to more innovation. New York Times, March 17, 2014
Science and politics – mix for best results. Times Higher Education, March 27, 2014
You’re never too old to be studied (w/D. Zulman). New York Times, May 22, 2014.
Why the massive black market trade in cigarettes affects you even if you don’t smoke, Washington Post, June 25, 2014.
Britain’s streets are booze-soaked war zones. The Telegraph, July 31, 2014
The U.S. imprisonment rate has fallen for the fifth straight year – here’s why. Washington Post, September 16, 2014.
Why the wealthy stopped smoking but the poor didn’t. Washington Post, January 14, 2015.
What the pot and pain pill overdose study teaches us about ecological fallacies (w/D. Kivlahan, A. Sox Harris, & J. Finney). PLOS Mind the Brain, April 28, 2015.
A simple fix for drunk driving. Wall Street Journal, August 14, 2015.
How the marijuana legalization movement went corporate. The Week, October 29, 2015.
Drug treatment: How to separate the good from the bad. Washington Monthly, June/July issue, 2016.
You can go home again: an addiction specialist returns to West Virginia to help. Stanford Medical School Magazine, Spring 2016,
I like The Establishment and you should too. USA Today, June 10, 2016.
Why the rate of Americans on probation has plummeted to a 20 year low. Washington Post, Dec 22, 2016.
Why we might want to grow the House of Representatives by 250 seats. Washington Post, Oct 3, 2016.
Why California still needs marijuana eradication programs. Sacramento Bee, January 6, 2017.
The mistake most states make when legalizing marijuana. Washington Post, January 18, 2017.
Americans use far more opioids than anyone else in the world. Washington Post, March 15, 2017.
Responding to opioids as an emergency is empty theater without science and funding (w/Richard Frank), The Hill, August 29, 2017.
How insurance companies can help fight the opioid epidemic, Washington Post, October 3, 2017.
Long-acting medications for opioids help patients control their future, unreliable, selves. STAT, October 19, 2017.
Just say no to opioids? Ads could actually make things even worse (w/Austin Frakt), New York Times, November 1, 2017.
One idea for preventing leftover opioids from fueling opioid abuse. Washington Post, December 5, 2017,
Have a drinking problem? Here’s a tool for finding effective treatment. Washington Post, January 1, 2018.
Drug dealers among us: look for those wearing lab coats or pinstripe suits. (w/J. Caulkins), The Hill, February 6, 2018.
Does naloxone availability increase opioid abuse? The case for skepticism. (w/ R. Frank and H. Pollack). Health Affairs, March 19, 2018.
How synthetic opioids can radically change global drug markets and foreign policy. (w/V. Felbab-Brown and J. Caulkins). Brookings Institution, April 30, 2018.
How legal drug companies helped revive the opioid trade. Washington Post, June 15, 2018.
How fatal police shootings were cut in half – and how we might do it again. Washington Post, July 9, 2018.
Do supervised drug consumption facilities save lives? Washington Post, December 6, 2018.
Why the price of pot matters to us all: How to improve on Cuomo’s legalization framework. New York Daily News, January 18, 2019.
Black imprisonment rates are down. It’s important to know why. (w/Charles Lane). Washington Post, April 30, 2019.
We can’t fight opioids by controlling demand alone. Washington Post, July 5, 2019.
The new government have a huge opportunity to reduce alcohol-related crime. Project for Modern Democracy, August 6, 2019. .
Yes, marijuana has a gateway effect. But so do most addictive substances. Washington Post, November 20, 2019.
How not to drown in opioids or pain: Lessons for North America from other countries (w/Vanda Felbab-Brown and Jonathan Caulkins). Brookings: Order from Chaos, January 13, 2020. Available on line at
Widespread testing may not work in America, we love our “freedom” too much. Washington Post, May 14, 2020.
BOOKS:
Drugs and Public Policy Group (11 authors total; Humphreys, K. was in senior author group). (2018). Drug
policy and the public good (2nd edition). London: Oxford University Press.
Humphreys, K., & Lingford-Hughes, A. (2016). Edwards’ Treatment of Drinking Problems (6th edition). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Drugs and Public Policy Group (12 authors total; Humphreys, K. was in senior author group). (2010). Drug policy
and the public good. London: Oxford University Press.
Marshall, J., Humphreys, K., & Ball, D. (2010). The treatment of drinking problems (5th edition). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Humphreys, K. (2004). Circles of Recovery: Self-help organisations for addictions. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Fincham, F. D., Fernandes, L. O. L., & Humphreys, K. (1993). Communicating in Relationships: A Guide for
Couples and Professionals. Champaign, IL: Research Press.
BOOK CHAPTERS:
Humphreys, K., & Pollack, H.A. (2020). How should the United States respond to the opioid addiction and
overdose epidemic? In H.H. Goldman, R. Frank, & J.P. Morrissey (Eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of
American Mental Health Policy. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
Bonnet, K., Noordsy, D., & Humphreys, K. (in press). Implications of lifestyle focused medicine for health care
systems and population health. In D. Noordsy (Ed.), Lifestyle psychiatry: Using exercise, diet, and
mindfulness to manage psychiatric disorders. Washington, D.C.: American Psychiatry Association.
Humphreys, K., McGovern, M., & McLellan, A.T. (2019). Integrated care for substance use disorder. In S.C.
Miller, D.A. Fiellin, R.N. Rosenthal, R., & R. Saitz (Eds.), Principles of Addiction Medicine (6th edition, pp. 423-432). Washington, D.C.: American Society of Addiction Medicine.
Kilmer, B., Caulkins, J., DuPont, R.L., & Humphreys, K. (2019). Reducing substance use in criminal justice
populations. In S.C. Miller, D.A. Fiellin, R.N. Rosenthal, R., & R. Saitz (Eds.), Principles of Addiction
Medicine (6th edition, pp. 1768-1774). Washington, D.C.: American Society of Addiction Medicine.
Humphreys, K. (2017). The opioid epidemic and the U.S. health care system. In A.R. Weil & R. Dolan (Eds.), Confronting our Nation’s Opioid Crisis: A report of the Aspen Health Strategy Group. Aspen, Colorado: Aspen Institute.
Maton, K., Humphreys, K., Jason, L. & Shinn, M. (2017). Community psychology in the policy arena. In M. A.
Bond, C. Keys, & I. Serrano-García (Eds.), Handbook of Community Psychology (2nd edition).
Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association.
Humphreys, K. (2015). Alcoholics Anonymous: An evidence-based resource. In E. Smith, B. Fredrickson, G. Loftus & S. Nolen-Hoeksema (Eds.). Atkinson and Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology (16th edition). New York: Thompson-Wadsworth.
Humphreys, K. (2014). Enhancing addiction treatment in the health care and criminal justice systems. In A. Mermer, A.Z. Olas & S. Yilmaz (Eds). Book of the International Symposium on drug policy and public health (pp. 53-60). Istanbul: Turkish Green Crescent Society.
Kelly, J., Humphreys, K., & Yeterian, J. (2013). Mutual-Help Groups. In M. Herie & W.J.W. Skinner (Eds.), Fundamentals of Addiction: A Practical Guide for Counsellors (pp. 321-348). Toronto: Centre on Addiction and Mental Health.
Lembke, A., & Humphreys, K. (2012). What self-help organizations teach us about the syndrome model of
addiction. In H. J. Shaffer (Ed.), A psychological view of addictions (pp. 157-168). Washington, D.C.:
American Psychological Association.
Humphreys, K., & McLellan, A. T. (2011). Forward. In J. F. Kelly and W. L. White (Eds.), Addiction recovery
management: Theory, research and practice. New York: Humana.
Lembke, A., Humphreys, K., & Moos, R. (2010). Diagnosis, development and treatment of substance use disorders
among adolescents and young adults. In Steiner, H. (Ed.), Stanford School of Medicine Handbook of
Developmental Psychiatry (pp. 365-396). New York: Jossey/Bass/Wiley.
Pistrang, N., Barker, C., & Humphreys, K. (2010). The contributions of mutual help interventions to psychological well-being: A systematic review. In L. D. Brown and S. Wituk (Eds.), Mental Health Self-Help: Consumer and Family Initiatives (pp. 61-85). New York: Springer.
Lembke, A., & Humphreys, K. (2009). Evidence based care for substance use disorder: A case example. In C.B. Taylor (Ed.), How to practice evidence-based psychiatry: Basic principles and case studies (pp. 233-246). Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association.
Lembke, A., & Humphreys, K. (2009). Self-help interventions for substance use disorders. In K. Sher (Ed.), Oxford Handbook of Substance Use Disorders. New York: Oxford University Press.
Lembke, A., & Humphreys, K. (2008). Alcoholics Anonymous. In H. Kranzler (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Drugs, Alcohol and Addictive Behavior (3rd edition). New York: MacMillan.
Humphreys, K., & Gifford, E. (2006). Religion, spirituality and the troublesome use of substances. In W. R. Miller and K. Carroll (Eds), Rethinking substance abuse: What the science shows and what we should do about it (pp.257-274). New York: Guilford.
(Reprinted) (2007) in Dutch as Religie, spritualiteit en het problematisch gebruik van alcohol en drugs. Verslaving, 3, 89-95.
Klaw, E., & Humphreys, K. (2005). Facilitating client involvement in self-help groups. In G. P. Koocher, J. C. Norcross, & S. S. Hill (Eds.), Psychologists’ desk reference (2nd edition, pp. 502-505). New York: Oxford University Press.
Humphreys, K. (2004). Comments on Bickel and Johnson. In N. Heather and R. Vuchinich (Eds.), Choice, behavioural economics, and addiction (pp.244-247). London: Elsevier.
Humphreys, K., Timko, C., & Moos, R. (2004). Gender differences in the influence of being married on help-seeking and alcohol abuse. In Addiction and the Life Course (NAD monograph 44), pp.99-112). Edited by Pia Rosenqvist, Jan Blomqvist, Anja Koski-Jännes and Leif Öjesjö. Helsinki: Nordic Council for Alcohol and Drug Research.
Isenberg, D., Loomis, C., Humphreys, K., & Maton, K. (2004). Self-help group research: Issues of power sharing. In L.A. Jason, C. B. Keys, Y. Suarez-Balcazar, R. R. Taylor, & M. I. Davis. Participatory community research: Theories and methods in action (pp.123-138). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Kelly, J., Humphreys, K., & Youngson, H. Mutual aid groups (2004). In S. Harrison & V. Carver
(Eds.), Alcohol & Drug Problems: A Practical Guide for Counsellors, 3rd edition (pp.169-197). Toronto: Canadian Addiction and Mental Health Institute.
Klaw, E., & Humphreys, K. (2004). The role of peer-led mutual help groups in promoting health and well-being. In J. L. Delucia-Waack, D. A. Gerrity, C. R. Kalodner, & M. T. Riva (Eds.), Handbook of Group Counseling and Psychotherapy (pp.630-640). Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
Loomis, C., & Humphreys, K. (2004). Mutual help organizations for distressed children and their families: A Vygotskian developmental perspective. In H. Steiner (Ed.), Handbook of mental health interventions in children and adolescents: An integrated developmental approach, (pp.849-871). New York: Wiley.
Klaw, E., & Humphreys, K. (2003). Twelve-step groups as communities. In K. Christensen and
Levinson, D. (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Community, Volume 4 (pp.1414-1417). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Humphreys, K. (2002). Alcoholics Anonymous and 12-step alcoholism treatment programs. In M. Galanter (Ed.), Recent Developments in Alcoholism (Volume XVI): Research on Alcoholism Treatment (pp.149-164). New York: Kluwer Academic.
Oliva, E., Horst, D., Trafton, J. & Humphreys, K. (2002). Pilot study of racial and geographic HIV risk among methadone patients. In Proceedings of the XIV International AIDS conference (pp. 279-282). Bologna: Monduzzi Editore.
Finney, J. W., Ouimette, P.C., Humphreys, K., & Moos, R. H. (2001). A comparative, process-effectiveness evaluation of VA substance abuse treatment. In M. Galanter (Ed.) Recent Developments in Alcoholism (Vol. XV): Services Research in the Era of Managed Care (pp. 373-391. New York: Kluwer Academic.
Humphreys, K. (2000). Alcoholics Anonymous. In A. Kazdin (Ed.), The Encyclopedia of Psychology (Volume 1), 108-111. New York: Oxford University Press.
Humphreys, K. (2000). Twelve-step groups. In A. Kazdin (Ed.), The Encyclopedia of Psychology (Volume 8), 128-132. New York: Oxford University Press.
Humphreys, K. (2000). Alcoholics Anonymous helps problem drinkers In R. L. Atkinson, R. C. Atkinson, E. E. Smith, D. J. Bem, S. Nolen-Hoeksema (Eds.), Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology (13th edition). New York: Harcourt-Brace.
Lieberman, M. A., & Humphreys, K. (2000). Self-help groups and substance abuse: An examination of Alcoholics Anonymous. In D. W. Brook & H. I. Spitz (Eds.), The Group Therapy of Substance Abuse (pp.203-221). New York: Haworth Medical Press.
Ribisl, K., & Humphreys, K. (1998). Collaboration between professionals and mediating structures in the community: Towards a "third way" in health promotion. In S. A. Shumaker, E. Schron, J. Ockene, & W. L. McBee (Eds.), Handbook of health behavior change (Second Edition, pp. 535-554). New York: Springer.
Humphreys, K. (1997). IVO-Award 1996: How are addicted individuals affected by participation in self-help/mutual aid organizations? Rotterdam, Holland: Addiction Research Institute.
Humphreys, K., & Moos, R. H. (1996). One year outcomes and alcohol-related health care cost offset of Alcoholics Anonymous participation. Proceedings of the 37th International Congress on Alcohol and Drug Dependence.
Humphreys, K. (1996). Guest Editor of Special Issue on "Self-help/mutual aid initiatives by people with psychiatric disabilities", Community Psychologist, 29 (3).
Kennedy, M., Humphreys, K., & Borkman, T. (1994). The naturalistic paradigm as an approach to research with mutual help groups. In T. J. Powell (Ed.), Understanding the Self-help Organization: Frameworks and Findings (pp. 172-189). Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
MONOGRAPHS AND TECHNICAL REPORTS:
Caulkins, J. & Humphreys, K. (joint-authored). (2020). Preventing opioid use and addiction: New thinking and
the latest evidence. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institute.
World Health Organization. (Humphreys, K. was one of 8 co-equal contributors). (in press). Drug Policy and Public
Health. Geneva: Author.
White, W., Galanter, M., Humphreys, K., & Kelly, J.F. (2020). “We do recover”: Scientific studies of Narcotics
Anonymous. Available at
Surgeon General of the United States. (Humphreys, K. was a senior editor and chapter author). (2016). Surgeon
General’s Report on Facing Addiction: Alcohol, Drugs and Health. Washington, D.C.: Department of
Health and Human Services.
Blue Ribbon Commission on Marijuana Policy (Steering Committee Newsom, G., Soltani, A., & Humphreys, K.).
(2015). Pathways report on policy options for regulating marijuana in California. San Francisco: ACLU.
Betty Ford Institute Consensus Conference (15 authors, Humphreys, K. in senior author group). (2013). The status
and future of addiction recovery support services in the United States. Betty Ford Institute, Palm Springs,
California.
National Advisory Council on Drug Abuse Workgroup (Keith Humphreys was one of 8 members). (2012).
Adoption of NIDA’s evidence-based treatments in real-world settings. Bethesda, MD: National Institutes
of Health.
Humphreys, K., & McLellan, A. T. (2010). Improving the outcomes of substance use disorder treatment: A policy
oriented review of options for the United Kingdom and the United States. Submitted as evidence in
November 3, 2010 to expert group of UK Advisory Committee on the Misuse of Drugs, The Home Office,
London.
Tracy, S., Trafton, J., & Humphreys, K. (2004). The Department of Veterans Affairs Substance Abuse Treatment System: Results of the 2003 Drug and Alcohol Program Survey. Palo Alto, CA: Department of Veterans Affairs Program Evaluation and Resource Center.
McKellar, J. D., Lie, C., & Humphreys, K. (2003). Health services for VA substance use disorder patients: Comparison of utilization in fiscal years 2003, 2002, and 1998. Palo Alto, CA: VA Program Evaluation and Resource Center.
Humphreys, K., & Horst, D. (2001). The Department of Veterans Affairs Substance Abuse Treatment System: Results of the 2000 Drug and Alcohol Program Survey. Palo Alto, CA: Department of Veterans Affairs Program Evaluation and Resource Center.
Steiner, H., Humphreys, K., Redlich, A., Silverman, M. Campanaro, S., & Kelly, J. (2001). The assessment of the
mental health system of the California Youth Authority: Report to Governor Gray Davis. Stanford,
CA: Stanford University School of Medicine.
Humphreys, K. (1999). Self-help groups and self-help influenced professional treatment for alcohol problems. Invited report prepared for NIAAA Treatment Research Branch Portfolio Review.
Humphreys, K., & Klaw, E. (1999). Expanding the self-help group movement to improve community health and well-being. Briefing paper prepared for The California Endowment and The California Wellness Foundation.
Humphreys, K., Dearmin Huebsch P., & Moos, R. H. (1998). The Department of Veterans Affairs substance abuse treatment system: Settings, services, staffing and management policies. Palo Alto, CA: Program Evaluation and Resource Center.
Hamilton, E. G., & Humphreys, K. (1996). Outpatient methadone services in the Department of Veterans Affairs:
Summary of clinic survey findings. Palo Alto, CA: Program Evaluation and Resource Center.
Humphreys, K., Hamilton, E. G., & Moos, R. H. (1996). Substance abuse treatment in the Department of Veterans Affairs: System Structure, Patients, and Treatment Activities. Palo Alto, CA: Program Evaluation and Resource Center.
Humphreys, K., Mavis, B. E., & Stöffelmayr, B. E. (1992, July). Substance abuse treatment agencies and self-help groups: Collaborators or competitors? Resources in Education. ERIC Document #341 927: University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
BOOK REVIEWS:
Humphreys, K. (2020). Supervised Chaos: Review of Second Chance Club: Hardship and Hope after Prison by
Jason Hardy. Washington Monthly, Spring issue, 42-44
Humphreys, K. (2010). Review of Research in Alcoholics Anonymous and spirituality in addiction recovery,
Volume 18 of Recent Developments in Alcoholism. Addiction, 105, 179-180.
Humphreys, K. (2007). Review of Alcohol, addiction and Christian ethics by Christopher Cook. Addiction, 102, 1989-1990.
Humphreys, K. (2006). Is addiction’s collateral damage culturally invariant? A review of Coping with alcohol and drug problems: The experiences of family members in three contrasting cultures by J. Orford et al. Addiction Research and Theory, 14, 647-648.
Humphreys, K. (2005). Review of Hideous absinthe: a history of the devil in a bottle. Addiction, 100, 564-567.
Humphreys, K. (2004). Classic texts revisited: A review of Thomas de Quincey’s Confessions of an English Opium Eater. Addiction, 99, 1221-1222.
Humphreys, K. (1999). Up you mighty race!: Four perspectives on a pioneer of African-American self-help. Community Psychologist, 32, 51-54.
Humphreys, K. (1994). Review of Research on Alcoholics Anonymous: Opportunities and Alternatives by B. McCrady and W. R. Miller (Eds.). Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 4, 216-217.
Humphreys, K. (1993). Review of The Spirituality of Imperfection by E. Kurtz and K. Ketcham. Community
Psychologist, 27, 23-24.
Lee, S., Cappella, E., & Humphreys, K. (2000). Review of Common Purpose: Strengthening families and neighborhoods to rebuild America by Lisbeth Schorr. Community Psychologist, 33, 19-20.
Salzer, M. S., & Humphreys, K. (1991). Review of Epidemiology and the Prevention of Mental Disorders, by B. Cooper and T. Helgason (Eds.). Community Psychologist, 25, 14 & 46.
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