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Alcohol Abuse clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03184298 Recruiting - Alcohol Abuse Clinical Trials

Piloting ProHealth: A Program for Male Soldiers on Sex, Dating and Alcohol-Use at Fort Bragg

Start date: April 23, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The proposed project will provide data concerning dating and sexual interactions that occur on Fort Bragg, North Carolina, in addition to piloting a sexual assault prevention program through the use of social norms and bystander intervention concepts. The investigators will be able to use data and feedback gained from this research to help reduce rates of sexual assault in the military by providing a sexual assault prevention program tailored to at risk male Soldiers that can be disseminated across military posts.

NCT ID: NCT03069118 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Alcohol Use Disorder

90-Day Online Substance Use Program

Start date: February 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Individuals indicating risky substance use are randomly assigned either to a three-month online intervention on the Workit Health platform or a waitlist/treatment as usual. Those randomized to treatment will report reduced consumption of alcohol and other drugs and higher quality of life at study conclusion.

NCT ID: NCT02299921 Recruiting - Infection Clinical Trials

Effect of Alcohol and Drugs of Abuse on Immune Function in Critically Ill Patients With Respiratory Failure

Start date: November 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study plans to learn more about people who are sick in the hospital with a lung infection, or respiratory failure. Respiratory failure, or severe lung failure, is a life-threatening disease. When it happens, the lungs have trouble carrying out their normal function of getting oxygen into the blood, and removing carbon dioxide from the body. Investigators are conducting this study to see what drinking too much alcohol, using tobacco products, or using drugs (both legal and illegal) may do to lung infections and respiratory failure. Subjects are asked to be in this research study because they are thought to have a lung infection and may also have respiratory failure. Alcohol, tobacco, and drug use have been linked to lung infections, respiratory failure, and even death, but the reasons for this aren't known. People who use unhealthy amounts of alcohol, tobacco, and or drugs may be more at risk for lung infections, and for severe complications due to lung infection. Subject participation is important whether or not you use alcohol and or drugs.

NCT ID: NCT01881841 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Tobacco Use Disorder

Computer Adaptation of Screening, Brief MET Intervention to Reduce Teen Drinking

Start date: January 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this project is to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and effect size of a new computerized Motivational Enhancement Therapy (cMET) intervention for alcohol-involved adolescents in primary care.

NCT ID: NCT01812187 Recruiting - Alcohol Dependence Clinical Trials

Designing a Mobile App for Veterans With Substance Use Problems

Start date: April 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to increase access for rural Veterans to evidence-based, person-centered, individually tailored treatment for alcohol use problems. The primary aim is to evaluate the acceptability and feasibility of using mobile technology deliver treatment for alcohol use disorder. A mobile application will be used replacing the usual setting of clinical visits that accompanies standard face-to-face CBT therapy. The application will be loaded onto an iPod, which will be distributed to each participant that has been found to be eligible to participate.

NCT ID: NCT01595568 Recruiting - Alcohol Abuse Clinical Trials

Prevention and Reduction of Alcohol and Drug Problems in a Clinical Psychiatric Youth Population

Start date: February 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In adolescents, mental health problems are frequently associated with substance misuse, even considered a risk factor for alcohol abuse and dependence. This dual diagnosis tends to complicate the patient's treatment and prognosis by increasing, among others, substance use problems, reckless behaviours, relationships and school problems and suicidal thoughts. It is therefore critical to invest time and effort into developing an efficient approach to prevent and reduce substance use problems and offer these children a more global and optimal treatment. A brief personality-targeted intervention was developed with students of Canadian and English high schools based on four personality factors known to be implicated in the vulnerability to adolescent alcohol misuse (Impulsivity, Anxiety Sensitivity, Negative Thinking and Sensation Seeking) (Conrod et al., 2006,2008, O'Leary-Barrett 2010). By helping the adolescents to develop better adaptive behaviours, this cognitive-behavioural intervention proved to reduce binge drinking, quantity and frequency of use and substance use problems (Conrod et al., 2006,2011). The purpose of this study is to assess the impact of this intervention if combined to a regular treatment in a youth psychiatric population. 60 patients aged 14-17 years of a Child and Adolescent psychiatric department will be screened for personality risk with self-report assessments including the Substance Use Risk Profile Scale. Participants will be randomly assigned to a personality matched cognitive-behavioural intervention or a no-intervention control. The main outcome measures of this study are alcohol and illicit drug outcomes. Secondary measures include mental health symptoms.

NCT ID: NCT00269009 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Tobacco Use Disorder

CHERL, Connecting Primary Care Patients With Community Resources to Facilitate Behavior Change

Start date: January 2006
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The investigators want to find out if providing a Community Health Educator Referral Liaison (CHERL) helps practices help their patients change risky behaviors (tobacco use, physical inactivity, unhealthy diet, and risky drinking) by connecting patients to available services in the community or directly providing behavior change support.

NCT ID: NCT00190073 Recruiting - Alcohol Abuse Clinical Trials

Cutaneous Denervation in Alcoholic Neuropathy

Start date: January 2005
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Peripheral neuropathy is a frequent neurological complication of chronic alcoholism. Most studies evaluated large-fiber involvement by nerve conduction studies (NCS). Since previous studies document the predominant injury of small myelinated and unmyelinated fibers in patients with alcoholic neuropathy, it will be imperative to know their prevalence and clinical significance. Moreover, the pathogenesis of alcoholic neuropathy, especially the roles of ethanol and its metabolites and thiamine, remains elusive. This proposal will be designed to understand the extent and clinical significance of cutaneous nerve degeneration in the skin of alcoholic patients and to investigate its pathogenesis. We will investigate cutaneous innervation by 3 mm punch skin biopsies with immunohistochemistry for protein gene product 9.5 and quantifying epidermal nerve density (END) in alcoholic patients. Patients will undergo clinical evaluation, quantitative sensory testing (QST), nerve conduction studies (NCS), and tests of sympathetic skin response (SSR) and beat-to-beat RR interval variability (RRIV). The prevalence of peripheral neuropathy in chronic alcoholic patients with emphasis on small-fiber involvement will be first evaluated. The sensitivity of punch skin biopsy, QST, SSR and RRIV tests, and NCS will be compared, and the correlations between END and psychophysic and electrodiagnostic parameters will be discussed. Subsequently, we will elucidate the clinical significance of END reduction in alcoholic patients. Patients with evidences of involvement of central nervous system will be excluded, and END will be correlated with clinical manifestations and neurological deficits. Finally, the role of ethanol and thiamine in alcoholic neuropathy will be further studied. To clarify the role of thiamine in alcoholic neuropathy, we will examine whether it has influences on small-fiber degeneration. This may provide important information in understanding the pathogenesis and designing optimal treatment for alcoholic neuropathy.