View clinical trials related to Substance-Related Disorders.
Filter by:Substance-abusing youth - especially those who are involved in the juvenile justice system - are at higher risk than nonusers for mental health problems, including depression, conduct problems, personality disorders, suicidal thoughts, attempted suicide, and completed suicide. The proposed Phase II project aims to develop and test the efficacy of a mobile app, called Rewire, that is geared toward helping high risk adolescent substance users reduce or quit their substance use. The Rewire app is based on the primary substance use cessation components tested in our previous work with juvenile justice-involved adolescents and on intervention components shown to be central to smoking cessation; it applies a mindfulness approach as the guiding framework for the intervention.
This will be a randomized, open-label, usability assessment of intramuscular, intranasal, and nasal spray administration of naloxone using two different instruction sets by laypersons. - Design: Single site, open-label, randomized usability assessment of intramuscular, intranasal, and nasal spray administration of simulated naloxone. A convenience sample of participants will consent to volunteer in the study at a public venue. Participants will provide verbal consent and will be randomly assigned a simulated naloxone kit containing either intramuscular, intranasal, or nasal spray administration materials with either standard or study team designed instructions for use. Participants will enter a use scenario station and be asked to assemble and administer the simulated naloxone kit to a mannequin (intranasal and nasal spray) or simulated flesh pad (intramuscular). The participant will be instructed to start and will be timed until the simulated naloxone has been successfully administered or 7 minutes has elapsed. The participant will be observed by one trained investigator who will assess for successful administration of the simulated naloxone and critical errors. The environment will contain distractors.Once the participant has successfully administered simulated naloxone or 7 minutes elapses the timer will be stopped. Successful administration of simulated naloxone will be defined as administration of the agent without any critical errors occurring (defined below). Data collected will include demographics (defined below), successful administration of simulated naloxone, time to successful administration of simulated naloxone, and Likert-item data assessing the ease of use of the device and instructions. - Participants: adults (18 years of age and older) at a public venue will be asked to volunteer. Participants with severe visual or hearing impairment (defined as: legally deaf, legally blind, unable to read print size provided on instructional handout, or unable to hear video audio), that have previous naloxone administration training, that are not English proficient, that are pregnant, or that have previously participated in the trial will be excluded. - Kits: 1. Intranasal: simulated naloxone vial, bristoject, administration instructions (standard or study team designed) 2. Intramuscular: sterile single use needle, sterile single use 3 mL syringe, simulated naloxone vial, administration instructions (standard or study team designed) 3. Nasal spray: simulated naloxone spray, administration instructions (standard or study team designed) - Objectives: 1. Primary: successful administration of simulated naloxone in the time allowed. A successful administration will be defined as administration of the simulated naloxone to the mannequin head of simulated flesh pad within 7 minutes and without any critical errors (defined below). 2. Secondary: time required to successfully administer the simulated naloxone and Likert-item assessment of ease of use of both the device and instructions. - Data and Analysis: 1. The usability trial will be conducted using a convenience sample so no power analysis will be conducted or minimum sample size defined 2. Demographics: age, gender, handedness, level of education, and presence or absence of opioid at risk contacts. 3. Data: successful administration, time to administration, and Likert-item assessment of both the device and instructions. Failure to administer the medication due to a critical use error will be recorded and the specific error reported for all participants. - Critical Errors: 1. Intranasal: failure to remove both yellow caps from bristoject, failure to remove cap from simulated naloxone, failure to attach atomizer, failure to attach simulated naloxone, drug leak prior to administration, administration in only one nostril, and failure to administer within 7 minutes. 2. Intramuscular: failure to attach the needle to the syringe, failure to remove cap from simulated naloxone, failure to draw up >90% (0.9 mL) of the simulated naloxone, failure to puncture simulated flesh pad with needle, failure to push entire volume of fluid in the syringe into the simulated flesh pad, and failure to administer within 7 minutes. 3. Intranasal: failure to place the tip of the device into one nostril, failure to depress the device and release the simulated naloxone, failure to administer within 7 minutes.
This multiple ascending dose study assesses the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of NP10679 when delivered intravenously in escalating dose levels in comparison to placebo.
This study will evaluate the efficacy and safety of bictegravir/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide (B/F/TAF) in HIV-1 infected patients who actively use illicit substances. The study will also evaluate retention in care and adherence to B/F/TAF by self-report and pharmacokinetic analysis.
The goal of the project is to build a clinical data research infrastructure that will begin to enhance capacity to use electronic health record (EHR) data and patient reported outcomes measures (PROs) to conduct opioid related research in emergency departments (EDs). 200 adult patients with a history of non-medical opioid use, opioid use disorder, or acute opioid overdose will be enrolled and will be asked to complete three PRO surveys (baseline, 3 days post ED discharge, and 30 days post discharge).
Hypothesis: Guanfacine (GUA) (3mg/day) will reduce drug craving, improve cognitive flexibility and result in associated lower drug use in women with substance use disorder (SUD) in an outpatient clinical setting.
This study has an experimental design and will examine the difference in pre-test and post-test data on the Self-Forgiveness Dual Process Scale (SFDPS) (Griffin, Worthington, Davis, Hook, & Maguen, 2018) and the Substance Abuse Self-Stigma Scale (SASSS) (Luoma et al., 2013). Data will be collected from two groups of participants receiving counseling at the short-term rehabilitation facility located at University of Pittsburgh Medical Center's (UPMC). Individuals who agree to participate in the study will be randomly assigned to either the experimental group (EG) or the control group (CG). Data collected will include pre-test SFDPS and SASSS scores for the EG and the CG (collected within 24-hours of admission), and post-test SFDPS and SASSS scores for the EG and CG (collected after 14 days). ANCOVA will be used to analyze the pre-test and post-test data recorded from participants' scores.
The goal of this study is to test the efficacy and the feasibility of the Asian Women's Action for Resilience and Empowerment (AWARE) intervention, in the real world setting -- student health service centers at Boston University, Wellesley College, and Harvard University. AWARE is an 8-week group intervention specifically designed to address mental health and sexual health issues among Asian-Pacific Islander (API) women. One AWARE group (final number of 8-10 API women who will be treated) will be held at BU Student Health Services, two groups at Wellesley College, and two groups at Harvard University Health Services for undergraduate and graduate students who meet the demographic and clinical criteria. During the intervention period, participants will attend the AWARE group counseling sessions, which are 90 minutes, once a week, for 8 weeks. Each week's session is focused on a specific theme related to the cultural and gender-specific issues typical among young Asian American women. The sessions are led by staff therapists at either institution. Participants will fill out forms that detail their therapeutic goals ("commitments") and any adverse emotional/behavioral events from the past week. Participants will also receive daily text messages that reinforce the group session themes. Participants will be assessed pre- and post-intervention on clinical outcomes, including depression, anxiety, PTSD, and suicidality, using standardized quantitative instruments. This serves to evaluate the efficacy of AWARE at improving mental health outcomes. Participants will also participate in a post-intervention focus group session to evaluate the program's implementation and suggest ways for future improvement.
The project proposes to continue the development of an intervention for relapse prevention in the form of a professional quality video game which rewards drug-rejecting physical motions and spoken refusal phrases. Phase I research findings showed that youth in recovery experienced increased low craving levels, strong levels of satisfaction, and interest in attending treatment sessions where the intervention is available - an important outcome since failure to attend treatment is highly correlated with relapse. In Phase II, the investigators propose to modify and expand the prototype based on customer feedback from treatment centers, counselors and patients. The investigators will test the effectiveness of the motion and voice-controlled game in a randomized controlled trial of youths in treatment for opioid use disorder who have access to the game for a month. The investigators will measure the effect of gameplay on successful completion of detoxification/inpatient treatment and rates of linkage to next level of outpatient treatment. The investigators will also measure the effect of gameplay compared to treatment as usual (TAU) during a subsequent episode of outpatient treatment (following inpatient), on rates of treatment attendance, treatment retention, urine drug test results, substance use self-report, treatment alliance, drug craving, and treatment satisfaction.
The planned randomized clinical trial will longitudinally test a tailored, web-based drug abuse prevention program with a nationwide sample of 15- to 17-year-old sexual minority youth (youth who identify as gay, lesbian, bisexual, or unsure of their sexual orientation).