View clinical trials related to Alcohol Consumption.
Filter by:This study will offer the first formal assessment for sexual violence (SV) in the college student health center setting, developed for a high risk group of college students, and is designed to facilitate patient and provider comfort in discussing sexual violence and related abusive experiences (including the role of alcohol) via semi-scripted screening tools. The intervention specifically involves the training of all clinical staff (health educators, counselors, medical assistants, nurses, and clinicians) to deliver a universal education and brief counseling intervention titled GIFTSS (Giving Information for Trauma Support and Safety) to all clients seeking college health services integrated into usual clinical practice, provide universal education about SV regardless of disclosure, counsel clients on harm reduction strategies to reduce risk for SV, and provide supported referrals to sexual assault advocates, with the goal of reducing SV among college students.
The prevalence of alcohol-related disorders in the general population is around 10%. The relationship between the use of healthcare services, costs and the amount of alcohol consumed by the general population is unknown. Because alcoholism is a major public health problem, it is significant to determine the prevalence of consumption of primary users and the relationship between the dose of alcohol and health care costs. This information may allow the implementation of preventive strategies to reduce consumption with the aim to reduce morbidity and healthcare expenditure. A cross-sectional study will be carried out. Patients over 17 years old, treated at primary healthcare centers in Catalonia that have available data on alcohol consumption from January 2010 to December 2012 will be included. Clinical and sociodemographic data will be collected. Health service use and health care costs from 2013 will be collected from SIDIAP (The Information System for the Development of Research in Primary Care) database. A positive relationship between grams of alcohol consumed per week and the use of resources and health expenditure will be expected and also the level of risk of alcohol consumption. There will be a descriptive analysis of the clinical data and sociodemographic variables. A multivariate analysis will be done to see the relationship between alcohol consumption and health care costs and health care service utilization.
The aim of the study is to study the profile of ethanol and non-oxidative biomarkers (ethyl glucuronide, ethyl sulphate and fatty acid ethyl esters) after experimental administration of increasing doses of alcohol in adult subjects.
Radical cystectomy provides the best cancer-specific survival for muscle-invasive urothelial cancer. However the postoperative morbidity remains at 11-68 %. Smoking and alcohol consumption above two drinks per day is associated with an increased risk of postoperative morbidity. Six-eight weeks of smoking and alcohol abstinence prior to elective surgery is recommended to reduce this risk, but for cancer patients the preoperative period is often very short. This randomised clinical trial (STOP-OP) will reach a conclusion on the effect of a new Gold Standard Programme for both smoking and alcohol cessation Intervention using the Gold Standard Programme (GSP) on the frequency and severity of postoperative complications after bladder cancer surgery.
The purpose of this study is to develop and test an integrated cognitive-behavioral intervention for smoking and alcohol among heavy drinking smokers. The current pre-pilot phase will be used to refine this protocol for the subsequent randomized, controlled pilot phase. The current study phase has two parts: 1) an intake session and brief physical; 2) a 12-week treatment phase in which participants receive varenicline (Chantix) and weekly, personalized counseling.
Objectives: The main objective of this pilot study is to assess the feasibility and effectiveness of a brief intervention to reduce drinking-driving behavior. Methods: Design: Pilot multicentre before/after intervention study without control group. Participants: We aim to recruit, from 01/01/2013 to 01/05/2013, 212 drivers aged 18 to 65 who declared to have consumed alcohol previous to driving, at least once in the past 30 days. Intervention: Brief behavioral intervention to reduce alcohol consumption before driving. Outcomes: Frequency of driving under the influence of alcohol in the past 30 days, regular alcohol consumption (Audit-C test), level of self-efficacy and stage of change according to the Prochaska and DiClemente's Transtheoretical Model of Change, sociodemographic variables, driver's profile, chronic pathologies, long -term medications, level of self risk perception. Information will be checked against medical record. Information on a) frequency of driving under the influence of alcohol in the past 30 days, b) regular alcohol and c) level of self-efficacy and stet of change according Prochaska State will be gathered at one month and 12 month post intervention. Descriptive bivariate analysis to assess the distribution of risk elements associated to drinking-driving behavior. Potential impact expected: This pilot project will determine the feasibility of making a brief advice intervention in drivers under the influence of alcohol in primary care.
Objective: To determine the immediate effects of oral alcohol consumption in healthy volunteers on gut wall integrity as measured by I-FABP and LBP. Study design: Randomized, single blinded cross over study. Study population: 15 healthy adult male human volunteers will be included in this study. Intervention: the consumption of alcoholic beverages (1 g/kg ethanol) of wine (12%) compared to the consumption of water. Main study parameters/endpoints: The aim of this study is to determine the immediate effects of oral alcohol consumption in healthy volunteers on gut wall integrity as measured by I-FABP and LBP. Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation, benefit and group relatedness: Subjects consume 1g of alcohol per kg bodyweight. One blood sample of 14 ml followed by 6 samples of 8 ml will be drawn between 16.45 hours and 19:00 hours the day after. The first 6 observations take place in a single visit followed by one observation in short visit the next day. It is unlikely that subjects will experience any physical or psychological discomfort from the withdrawal of a total of 62 ml of blood in 24 hours or the consumption of the amounts alcohol or water mentioned above. The same protocol will be repeated one week after the first visit in which the alcohol group and water group are crossed over.
Hypothesis: Red wine intake but not other alcoholic beverages together with a fat diet will decrease inflammatory factors and lipid peroxidation and decrease antioxidant capacity in healthy people after a five days period.
The primary aim of the present study is to study the effect of a brief automated alcohol intervention in University students, and if there is a difference in effect between automated brief interventions delivered by internet (WEB) or Interactive Voice Response (IVR), and to study if there is difference in effect between single and repeated interventions.
The aims of this project are to: 1. Determine if 3-weeks dietary supplementation with NOPE-EGCG (PhosphoLEANtm, 85mg NOPE+50mg EGCG per capsule) versus a placebo will improve performance on impulsivity, go/no-go tasks and negative outcome learning in heavy drinkers. 2. Evaluate whether supplementation with NOPE-EGCG versus placebo results in reductions in alcohol consumption. 3. Preliminary data in the rodent model suggests that rats treated with OEA shift preference for lower fat test stimuli. In aim 3 we will Determine if 3-weeks of supplementation with PhosphoLEAN shifts fat preference towards lower fat test puddings.