View clinical trials related to Alcohol Drinking.
Filter by:Harmful alcohol use is a global risk factor for disease, injuries and death. Research on treatment of Alcohol use disorders (AUDs) indicates that different treatment modalities are equally effective, but also that a large group of patients do not change their drinking pattern despite being in treatment. It is assumed that it is not random who benefits from treatment. Thirty to forty percent of outcome variance in treatment is probably explained by patient factors, and we need more knowledge on how different patient factors moderate treatment effects. Further, clinicians also need more knowledge about selecting patients to different therapies. The present study will investigate how patient factors predict outcome in group treatment of AUDs, and what predicts positive treatment outcomes over time. The study is designed as a quasi-experimental, multi-centre, follow-up study. Patients will be included from Vestfold Hospital Trust, Borgestadklinikken, Blue Cross Clinic, Behandlingssenteret Eina, Blue Cross Clinic and A-senteret, Oslo, Church City Mission. The Project will provide more knowledge about patients seeking treatment for AUDs, and specifically how patient factors predict outcome in group treatment. These results will in turn lead to better selection of treatment modalities, and patients will receive a more effective treatment earlier on. Main aims: 1) How do patient factors predict outcome in group treatment of alcohol use disorders (AUDs)? 2) Do positive treatment outcomes last over time? Specifically, do the following factors: a) psychiatric comorbidity b) severity of alcohol use pre-treatment c) personality disorders and d) cognitive impairments predict 1) completion of group treatment and 2) positive outcome after 1 year. As an additional aim, we will investigate if the Montreal Cognitive Assessment test (MoCa) is feasible as a brief screening instrument for mild cognitive impairments for AUD patients.
This study will recruit Emergency Department (ED) patients with moderate to severe alcohol use disorder (AUD) who are interested in initiating medication assisted treatment (MAT). The study is split into two phases. The first phase (N=10) will use implementation science strategies to strengthen existing non-targeted ED based AUD screening program and optimize feasibility, acceptability, and linkage pathways. The second phase (N=20) will incorporate lessons learned from phase 1 to initiate ED patients on MAT for AUD in the form of oral naltrexone. The primary outcome for both phase 1 and phase 2 is engagement in comprehensive addiction treatment at 14 and 30 days post enrollment.
- Main objective: to verify the effectiveness of a brief intervention, based on the motivational interview (MI), in patients with excessive alcohol consumption assisted in Primary Care (PC). - Design: a multicenter, randomized, cluster-controlled clinical trial with two parallel arms. PC professionals will be randomized to one of the two study groups: 1) Experimental Group (EG): MI-based approach; 2) Control group (CG): usual care. At least 50 family doctors, residents and nurses will participate, recruiting PC patients (n = 394). GE intervention: Training program to acquire specific skills on approaching risky alcohol consumption. It will consist of a workshop, with two video recordings of consultations with simulated standardized patients, before and after it, with each participant receiving formative feedback at the end. -Intervention GC: medical advice that is usually performed in these patients. To measure the knowledge and attitude of professionals in dealing with patients with alcohol consumption, they will fill out a validated questionnaire. In addition, expert evaluators, after viewing the video recordings, will fill out a check-list to check the attitude of each professional, using the EVEM Scale. -Study population: patients ≥14 years of age with risky consumption, detected by the professional in health centers in the province of Córdoba (Spain). Sample size: Assuming a loss rate of 5%, and the "cluster design effect", the number of subjects to be recruited is estimated at 394 (197 / group). Intervention control mechanism: each participant will be audio-recorded with a real patient in a randomly chosen visit, evaluating her skills with the EVEM scale. The follow-up period for each patient will be 12 months, with 4 visits (initial, per month, 3 months, and 6 months) and 4 interleaved telephone contacts. The main outcome variable will be the level of self-reported alcohol consumption and the AUDIT questionnaire score. -Statistical analysis by intention to treat. Descriptive analysis and initial comparability of the groups will be carried out, and the effect of the intervention (dependent variable: abstinence or consumption reduction and AUDIT score) will be evaluated through bivariate and multivariate analysis.
The randomized trials in this record will assess effectiveness, fidelity and cost of prevention and treatment interventions for HIV and hypertension with the objective of informing a population-based study of multi-sectored, multi-disease interventions for HIV.
This study is being conducted to assess the acceptability and feasibility of a randomized trial of a 10 week virtual intervention to reduce fall risk in people with HIV who consume alcohol. The hypothesis is that this randomized trial of the fall prevention intervention will be found to be feasible and acceptable in this pilot stage. Standardized assessments will be administered in-person at Boston University Medical Campus to assess various domains including fall risk, fear of falling, physical performance measures (such as grip strength, balance, and gait speed), substance use, and other related measures. The intervention has 3 main components: home exercises, virtual group sessions and weekly phone check-ins. Home exercise will be customized to match the current fitness level of participants. Participants will be asked to complete assigned exercises 3 times per week. Additionally, there will be a weekly virtual group session led by an Occupational Therapist trained in group facilitation via Zoom. The virtual group sessions will be used to help answer any questions and lead a discussion around challenges related to falls. Finally, a member of the research team will check-in with participants once per week to answer any remaining questions that participants have, provide individual feedback on exercises, and set up reminders for the upcoming week. Reminders will be tailored to the individual participant's needs to remind the participant to complete the intervention's components.
Self-medication of pain by consuming alcohol and marijuana is common. However, the research regarding pain as a determinant for alcohol and marijuana use has relied on laboratory pain induction paradigms with limited clinical relevance. The study will assess demand for alcohol and marijuana before and after delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) induction in co-users. This will provide a clinically relevant, but time-limited, model for the effects of musculoskeletal pain on demand.
Despite bariatric surgery being the most effective weight loss intervention for patients who are severely obese, as many as 1 in 5 patients will develop an alcohol use disorder after their surgery. Changes in metabolism, hormone levels, and behavior as a result of bariatric surgery alter the rewarding effects of alcohol while concurrently changing its absorption rate, putting patients at significantly elevated risk of hazardous drinking. Simply providing education to this vulnerable patient population about post-surgical risks has not been sufficient to reduce alcohol use, yet comprehensive in-person interventions are met with significant challenges, including hours-long distances between patients and their bariatric surgery programs. Thus, the long-term goal is to increase access to an empirically-supported intervention for reducing alcohol use among patients who undergo bariatric surgery by leveraging technology. This intervention, rooted in motivational interviewing and the transtheoretical model, is a two-session computerized brief intervention CBI, supplemented by six months of tailored text messaging based on participants CBI results and subsequent fluctuations in their readiness to change. The purpose of the proposed study is to optimize this technology-based intervention for patients who undergo bariatric surgery and to examine feasibility and acceptability of the intervention. In the first phase, patient interviews will be utilized to identify preferences for intervention content and treatment delivery. Ten patients will then participate in an open trial of the intervention, which will be subsequently revised based on feedback from these patients. In Phase 2, patients will be recruited between 3 and 6 months following bariatric surgery and randomized to the intervention or treatment as usual control group. All patients will complete baseline questionnaires and at 1, 3, 6, and 9 month post-assessments. The investigators expect that this intervention will be both feasible and acceptable to patients. Results will be used as preliminary data to inform a large, fully-powered clinical trial to test the larger efficacy of this intervention.
The effects of alcohol consumption during pregnancy have been known for decades. However, alcohol consumption in pregnant women remains today a public health problem and its identification is primordial. During pregnancy, standardized self-reports such as T-ACE would help identify early women with high-risk alcohol consumption. T-ACE appears to be one of the most used during pregnancy but its diagnostic value is not objectively known. To evaluate the diagnostic value of T-ACE self-report in the detection of high-risk alcohol consumption during pregnancy, by comparison with the dosage of a biomarker in blood. Material and methods Multicentric diagnostic prospective study of 2425 pregnant women followed in 3 hospitals of North of France. The self-report will be offered to all women during their prenatal consultation in these 3 maternity clinics. When they returned their self-report to the medical practitioner, a unique blood test of phosphatidylethanol will be proposed to them for a period of one year. Made after informed consent, this dosage will be used as a gold standard of an alcohol consumption during the previous three weeks to establish the diagnostic value of T-ACE. An alcohol consumption will be considered " at high risk " if blood phosphatidylethanol is ≥ 20 µg/L. With a predictable 25% rejection rate and a positive 4% T-ACE frequency, the inclusion of 2425 patients should permit to estimate sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV) and negative predictive value (NPV) of T-ACE with a satisfactory 95% confidence interval in this population. The evidence of a link between positive T-ACE and real high-risk alcohol consumption in pregnant women would objectively validate the use of this self-report during pregnancy. The T-ACE within the self-report (self-administered questionnaire) set up in these 3 maternity hospitals in the North of France is already a reference thanks to its several advantages to better identify psychosocial risk situations and especially high-risk alcohol consumption during pregnancy than medical history. If T-ACE appeared to be a sensitive and specific method for identifying high-risk alcohol use during pregnancy, it could be generalized in the follow-up of pregnant women in our country.
This study is designed to develop an integrated intervention to reduce alcohol and marijuana use and consequences and improve sleep among young adults with comorbid heavy episodic drinking, marijuana use, and sleep impairment.
The purpose of the study was to evaluate the risk, consequences and epidemiology of electric scooter accidents admitted to the emergency room at St. Pierre University Hospital. This prospective observational study aims to include any patient admitted to the Adult Emergency Department of St.Pierre University Hospital Brussels following an accident related to the use of an electric scooter in order to describe and understand the epidemiology, complications and treatment of injuries associated with this means of transport. It is intended to include all accidents occurring in the emergency room during the period from 01/06/2019 to 30/06/2020.