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Alcohol; Harmful Use clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05533554 Completed - Clinical trials for Alcohol; Harmful Use

Brief Intervention Based on the Theory of Planned Behavior to Reduce Alcohol Consumption in University Students

Start date: September 23, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Brief behavioral intervention designed from the guidelines of the Theory of Planned Action (TAP) of Ajzen (1991). It has the general objective of reducing the intention and hazardous and harmful consumption of alcohol in young university students in the first year of their undergraduate degree. The following specific objectives are considered: (a) Impact on the personal and descriptive norm by modifying the perception of the actual use of alcohol and its level of acceptance among the population of university students. (b) Modify attitudes towards consumption by reducing the value attributed to the expectations associated with risky alcohol consumption. (c) Increase perceived behavioral control and self-efficacy to avoid alcohol consumption behavior by: establishing a goal, consumption planning, and increase assertive communication.(d) Reduce the negative consequences of the use of alcohol in different situations of young people through pleasant healthy activities. e) Increase the intention to seek help for alcohol-related problems.The intervention will be developed through 3 phases. The first phase corresponds to the pre-intervention evaluation, the second phase concerns the two intervention sessions and the third phase is the post-intervention evaluation. Hypothesis: The mean alcohol consumption will be lower in young adults with hazardous and harmful alcohol consumption in the experimental group who received a brief online intervention compared to the control group.

NCT ID: NCT04494633 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Summative Assessment of the BurntOut 3D Simulation With Medical Students

Start date: May 11, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Burnout is a common problem for medical students and is associated with stress-related health problems and also potentially affects the quality of care delivered to their patients. Among the health problems commonly associated with burnout are substance use problems, and alcohol is the substance most often misused. The purpose of the evaluation is to document whether an educational intervention incorporating aspects of virtual reality (VR) via a 3D online simulation experience prevents or improves the primary endpoint of burnout and the secondary endpoints of burnout-related factors in medical students. The investigators will also will evaluate student satisfaction with the intervention to determine if it meets our standard of success. The hypothesis is that the intervention will improve the primary clinical endpoint of burnout from pre-intervention to post-intervention as measured by the Maslach Burnout Inventory, a validated inventory that is widely used to measure burnout. The related factors that will be measured as secondary clinical endpoints include quality of life, substance use (alcohol and drugs), depression, and resilience. Due to evidence that these endpoints are linked to burnout, the investigators also hypothesize that the measures will improve pre- to post-intervention. Satisfaction of the target audience after completing the simulation intervention will also be evaluated. The evaluation will be prior to and after use of the simulation by medical student participants, using a pre-/post intervention, wait-list control, parallel design.

NCT ID: NCT04263259 Completed - Clinical trials for Alcohol; Harmful Use

Efficacy and Mechanisms of Mobile-Delivered Alcohol Attentional Bias Modification

Start date: January 8, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study evaluates the efficacy as well as psychological and neurobiological mechanisms of mobile-delivered alcohol attentional bias modification among heavy drinking adults.

NCT ID: NCT04229550 Completed - Glucose Intolerance Clinical Trials

Metabolic Effects of One-weak Heavy Drinking

ROSMET
Start date: June 1, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Examination of the effect of one week's unhealthy lifestyle on glucose metabolism and liver parameters in a group of young, healthy males participating in Roskilde Festival 2016.

NCT ID: NCT03884478 Completed - Alcohol Drinking Clinical Trials

A Gamified, Social Media Inspired Personalized Normative Feedback Alcohol Intervention for Sexual Minority Women

Start date: February 6, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Sexual minority women in the United States are more likely to drink alcohol, engage in heavy drinking, and experience alcohol-related problems than are heterosexual women. Yet, to date, no evidence-based intervention or prevention efforts have been developed to reduce alcohol consumption among female sexual minority community members. The proposed research seeks to narrow the disparity in alcohol intervention research by examining an innovative gamified personalized normative feedback (PNF) intervention to reduce drinking among sexual minority women found to frequent social media sites and overestimate norms related to peers' general alcohol use and drinking to cope with sexual minority stigma. The newly developed GANDR (Gamified Alcohol Norm Discovery and Readjustment) PNF format takes the well-established core components of a PNF alcohol intervention and delivers these components within an inviting, social media inspired, culturally-tailored online competition. This incognito intervention format is designed to be more appealing, engaging, believable, positively received, and thus effective than standard web-based PNF. The version developed for sexual minority women delivers PNF on alcohol use and stigma-coping behaviors within the context of an online game about sexual minority female stereotypes. Following two introductory rounds of play by a large cohort of sexual minority women, a sub-sample of 500 sexual minority female drinkers will be invited to participate in an evaluation study. Study participants will be randomized to receive 1 of 3 unique sequences of feedback (i.e., Alcohol & Stigma-Coping, Alcohol & Control, or Control topics only) during 2 intervention rounds taking place over a 6-month period. The randomized feedback sequences and multiple rounds of play will allow the research team to evaluate whether PNF on alcohol use reduces sexual minority women's alcohol consumption and negative consequences relative to PNF on control topics (AIM 2: H1), examine whether providing PNF on stigma-coping behaviors in addition to alcohol use further reduces alcohol use and consequences beyond alcohol PNF alone (AIM 2: H2), and identify mediators and moderators of intervention effectiveness (AIM 3).

NCT ID: NCT03804788 Completed - Insomnia Clinical Trials

The iTAP Study for Veterans

iTAP-V
Start date: April 4, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project aims to evaluate improvement of insomnia as a mechanism of improvement in alcohol use outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT03755661 Completed - Clinical trials for Alcohol; Harmful Use

MI With Text Messaging to Reduce Sexual Risk and Hazardous Drinking Among MSM

MI&TXT4MSM
Start date: October 9, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a small pilot study to provide effect size estimates for a brief intervention designed to reduce hazardous drinking and sexual risk behavior among men who have sex with men. The intervention consists of an "in-person" brief motivational intervention followed by a series of text messages related to alcohol and sexual risk reduction. The primary outcome is heavy drinking episodes and frequency of condomless anal intercourse at 3 months.

NCT ID: NCT03696888 Completed - Clinical trials for Alcohol Use Disorder

Skills-training for Reducing Risky Alcohol Use in App Form

Start date: December 7, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study evaluates the efficacy of a skills training web-based mobile phone application, Telecoach among individuals in the general population seeking help for their risky alcohol consumption on the Internet. The design is a two-armed randomized controlled design, and outcomes are measured in terms of changes in excessive alcohol use at follow up 6, 12 and 26 weeks after study initiation and baseline data gathering. The Telecoach web app delivers skills training in the form of exercises commonly used in psychosocial interventions for risky alcohol use. The controll condition is a web app providing information on the effects of alcohol on the consumers' health.

NCT ID: NCT03627832 Completed - Insomnia Clinical Trials

Insomnia Treatment and Problems (the iTAP Study)

iTAP
Start date: August 29, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project aims to evaluate the efficacy of insomnia treatment in improving insomnia symptoms and alcohol-related problems among heavy-drinking young adults.

NCT ID: NCT03589508 Completed - Clinical trials for Alcohol; Harmful Use

Testing A Couple-based Program for Alcohol Risk Reduction in the National Guard

GF_CARE
Start date: July 1, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this project is to develop and test indicated prevention intervention to harness support and health promoting endeavors to address use of alcohol to cope with reintegration challenges in Massachusetts National Guard (MANG) service members.