Substance-Related Disorders Clinical Trial
Official title:
SBIR Phase II: Scalable Digital Delivery of Evidence-based Training for Family to Maximize Treatment Admission Rates of Opioid Use Disorder in Loved Ones
Verified date | April 2024 |
Source | We The Village, Inc. |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The United States is in the midst of an opioid crisis. Over-prescription of opioid analgesic pain relievers contributed to a rapid escalation of use and misuse of these substances across the country. In 2016, more than 2.6 million Americans were diagnosed with opioid use disorder (OUD) and more than 42,000 have died of overdose involving opioids. This death rate is more than any year on record and has quadrupled since 1999 (1,2). Leveraging the potential of available data bases and health IT technologies may help to combat opioid crisis by targeting various aspects of the problem ranging from the prevention of opioid misuse to OUD treatment. NIH through NIDA solicits the research and development of data-driven solutions and services that focus on issues related to opioid use prevention, opioid use, opioid overdose prevention or OUD treatment. In this project, We The Village, Inc. will address a need to prepare Concerned Significant Others (CSOs) to best use their influence over the trajectory of a loved one's OUD. CSOs are motivated to help, make majority of treatment decisions and payments and have influence over treatment entry and thus, impact the trajectory of an OUD. The goal of the project is to establish the technical efficacy and commercial viability of CRAFT-A at scale by conducting the fully powered randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing two online interventions: CRAFT-A (hereinafter referred to as CRAFT or digital CRAFT) and PEER support (the original comparison group). Based on Phase I findings, the team anticipates the CRAFT condition will achieve better outcomes than the PEER condition in a) treatment entry and retention, b) Concerned Significant Others' (CSO) health and wellbeing, c) CSO-IP relationship, and d) CRAFT knowledge.
Status | Active, not recruiting |
Enrollment | 212 |
Est. completion date | September 22, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | May 31, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 19 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Is a concerned significant other (CSO) of a loved one with an OUP - Be 19 years or older - No substance use disorder - Has concern about the opioid use of a loved one (IP) - Plans to be in close contact (phone/face-to-face) with the IP (i.e., 12 days out of 30) - The IP is not currently receiving treatment, or is in treatment, but the CSO perceives they may benefit from additional treatment (e.g., in residential treatment, but will need to enter outpatient treatment upon discharge or receiving drug free outpatient but not progressing, so may benefit from MAT). Exclusion Criteria: - Does not agree to all procedures and sign the consent form - Is not English-speaking - Is not able to understand the consent form - Pass a multiple-choice consent quiz (i.e., 100% correct responses) that tests the participant's comprehension of basic elements of informed consent and the requirements of the protocol administered by the research team over the phone. - Participants will be given up to three opportunities to pass the consent quiz - Does not have personal access to a smart phone with data or a computer with internet to be able to access the digital platform for the study conditions, quizzes, questionnaires, and follow-up communication - Reports that they have a drug abuse problem or a history of drug abuse or dependence and that they have not been in recovery for at least 2 years - Resides outside the United States - Participated in previous We The Village pilot study |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | We The Village, Inc. | New York | New York |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
We The Village, Inc. | National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), Public Health Management Corporation |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | New Treatment Entry: IP Treatment Status | Participants report whether their loved one has attended any treatment for their opioid problem since the last assessment by answering 8 questions regarding participation in treatment (e.g., detox, any treatment, new treatment, MAT, new MAT, counseling, support group, and other group). Reports of new treatment, new MAT, and treatment at the follow-up assessment which are not reported at baseline will be categorized as treatment entry. In addition, entry into WTV recovery coaching, WTV family coaching, or reports of treatment entry to WTV staff will be categorized as treatment entry. The outcome is the proportion of participants reporting that their loved one (IP) entered new treatment. | 3 months | |
Secondary | Treatment Retention: IP Treatment Retention Status | Participants report whether their loved one has attended any treatment for their opioid problem since the last assessment by answering 8 questions regarding participation in treatment (e.g., detox, any treatment, new treatment, MAT, new MAT, counseling, support group, and other group). Reports of same treatment, same MAT, and treatment at the follow-up assessment which are reported at baseline will be categorized as treatment retention. In addition, retention in WTV recovery coaching, WTV family coaching, or reports of treatment entry to WTV staff will be categorized as treatment retention. The outcome is the proportion of participants reporting that their loved one (IP) is retained in treatment. | 3 months | |
Secondary | Treatment Retention: IP Treatment Retention Status | Participants report whether their loved one has attended any treatment for their opioid problem since the last assessment by answering 8 questions regarding participation in treatment (e.g., detox, any treatment, new treatment, MAT, new MAT, counseling, support group, and other group). Reports of same treatment, same MAT, and treatment at the follow-up assessment which are reported at baseline will be categorized as treatment retention. In addition, retention in WTV recovery coaching, WTV family coaching, or reports of treatment entry to WTV staff will be categorized as treatment retention. The outcome is the proportion of participants reporting that their loved one (IP) is retained in treatment. | 6 months | |
Secondary | Relationship Happiness: Relationship Happiness Scale | Global score from the 10-item scale was calculated by adding scores (1-10) from 10 items. Minimum possible score was 10 and maximum was 100. Higher scores reflect greater Relationship Happiness. | 3 months | |
Secondary | Relationship Happiness: Relationship Happiness Scale | Global score from the 10-item scale was calculated by adding scores (1-10) from 10 items. Minimum possible score was 10 and maximum was 100. Higher scores reflect greater Relationship Happiness. | 6 months | |
Secondary | CSO Health and Wellbeing: Profile of Mood State (POMS) - Short Form | Total mood disturbance (TMD) score calculated by adding scores (1-5) from the tension (6 items), depression (8 items), anger (7 items), fatigue (5 items), and confusion (5 items) subscales, then subtracting the score form the vigor (6 items) subscale. Minimum TMD possible score was 1 and maximum was 149. Higher scores reflect greater mood disturbance. | 3 months | |
Secondary | CSO Health and Wellbeing: Profile of Mood State (POMS) - Short Form | Total mood disturbance (TMD) score calculated by adding scores (1-5) from the tension (6 items), depression (8 items), anger (7 items), fatigue (5 items), and confusion (5 items) subscales, then subtracting the score form the vigor (6 items) subscale. Minimum TMD possible score was 1 and maximum was 149. Higher scores reflect greater mood disturbance. | 6 months | |
Secondary | CSO Health and Wellbeing: SF-12 Physical Health Subscale | The 7-item scale was transformed so that is had a mean of 50 and a s.d. of 10 in the general US population. Scores above and below 50 are above and below the average with each point representing a difference of 1/10th of a standard deviation. | 3 months | |
Secondary | CSO Health and Wellbeing: SF-12 Physical Health Subscale | The 7-item scale was transformed so that is had a mean of 50 and a s.d. of 10 in the general US population. Scores above and below 50 are above and below the average with each point representing a difference of 1/10th of a standard deviation. | 6 months | |
Secondary | Work Productivity and Activity Impairment: Work Productivity and Activity Impairment questionnaire | The WPAI yeilds four types of scores:
Absenteeism (work time missed) Presenteesism (impairment at work / reduced on-the-job effectiveness) Work productivty loss (overall work impairment / absenteeism plus presenteeism) Activity Impairment WPAI outcomes are expressed as impairment percentages, with higher numbers indicating greater impairment and less productivity. |
3 months | |
Secondary | Work Productivity and Activity Impairment: Work Productivity and Activity Impairment questionnaire | The WPAI yeilds four types of scores:
Absenteeism (work time missed) Presenteesism (impairment at work / reduced on-the-job effectiveness) Work productivty loss (overall work impairment / absenteeism plus presenteeism) Activity Impairment WPAI outcomes are expressed as impairment percentages, with higher numbers indicating greater impairment and less productivity. |
6 months | |
Secondary | CRAFT Knowledge: CRAFT Knowledge Scale | Measuring the proficiency with which participants answer questions about what to do in scenarios as per the CRAFT approach. | 3 months | |
Secondary | CRAFT Knowledge: CRAFT Knowledge Scale | Measuring the proficiency with which participants answer questions about what to do in scenarios as per the CRAFT approach. | 6 months | |
Secondary | New Treatment Entry: IP Treatment Status | Participants report whether their loved one has attended any treatment for their opioid problem since the last assessment by answering 8 questions regarding participation in treatment (e.g., detox, any treatment, new treatment, MAT, new MAT, counseling, support group, and other group). Reports of new treatment, new MAT, and treatment at the follow-up assessment which are not reported at baseline will be categorized as treatment entry. In addition, entry into WTV recovery coaching, WTV family coaching, or reports of treatment entry to WTV staff will be categorized as treatment entry. The outcome is the proportion of participants reporting that their loved one (IP) entered new treatment. | 6 months |
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