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Drug Use Disorders clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Drug Use Disorders.

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NCT ID: NCT06317987 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Alcohol-Related Disorders

Addressing Barriers to Care for Substance Use Disorder Pilot Study

ABCSUD Pilot
Start date: June 15, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The Addressing Barriers to Care for Substance Use Disorder Pilot (ABC-SUD Pilot) is a randomized pilot study that will precede a larger trial. The ABC-SUD Pilot is a parallel group, cluster-randomized pilot feasibility trial, with clinicians (care coordinators) as the unit of randomization. This study will be conducted in a mental health treatment access center within the Washington region of Kaiser Permanente. As part of usual care, patients contact the mental health access center and speak to a "care coordinator" to obtain contact information for potential venues to obtain treatment for substance use disorder. The experimental intervention, Care Navigation, will be evaluated for its potential to increase the utilization of substance use disorder treatment among patients who contact the mental health treatment access center. The investigators note that Care Navigation will be delivered by study "care navigators", who are distinct from the health system's care coordinators.

NCT ID: NCT06163651 Not yet recruiting - Pregnancy Related Clinical Trials

Evaluating a One-Year Version of the Parent-Child Assistance Program

PCAP-1
Start date: September 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The proposed project seeks to achieve four objectives that will, collectively, evaluate the effectiveness of a one-year version of the Parent-Child Assistance Program (PCAP-1) -a model for a home visitation and case management program for parents who used substances during pregnancy. First, the proposed project aims to estimate the causal impact of PCAP-1 on preventing the need for foster care and promoting reunification. Second, the project will estimate PCAP-1's effectiveness in achieving other program goals: parent recovery, parent's connection with needed comprehensive community resources, and preventing future children from being exposed to drugs and alcohol prenatally. Third, the project intends to estimate any cost savings from the perspective of the state. Finally, causal evidence of program effectiveness across the prior three objectives would enable PCAP-1 to be rated according to strength of evidence on relevant federal registries (i.e., FFPSA and HOMEVEE). All four objectives will be pursued by leveraging an ongoing randomized control trial (RCT) of PCAP with substantial backing from public and private partners, including the Oklahoma Department of Human Services (OK's Title IV-E agency). This quasi-experimental project will recruit 40 new participants to receive PCAP-1 services and will use data on participants from the existing trial for the control group. This extension of the original RCT is efficient and highly feasible, drawing upon and adapting an existing evaluation framework and protocol. This design will facilitate an unbiased estimation of one-year program effectiveness while also enabling a comparison of the differential effectiveness of PCAP-1 and the original three-year PCAP model as a secondary benefit. Moreover, given that the population PCAP serves are disproportionately poor and low-income and PCAP is designed to be culturally competent and relevant, PCAP-1 harbors the potential to address inequities in child welfare outcomes, substance use disorder treatment services, and child and family well- being by improving outcomes for these families. With a strong backing by state agencies and community partners, the evaluation of PCAP-1 will contribute to a knowledge gap in the field for in-home program models serving a highly vulnerable population with high rates of child welfare involvement and use of foster care.