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Alcohol-Related Disorders clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Alcohol-Related Disorders.

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NCT ID: NCT05916027 Active, not recruiting - General Practice Clinical Trials

Identification and Treatment of Alcohol Problems in Primary Care

iTAPP
Start date: January 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The Identification and Treatment of Alcohol Problems in Primary Care (iTAPP) Study is a pragmatic cluster randomized controlled intervention trial evaluating the effectiveness of the 15-Method as an identification and treatment tool for alcohol-related problems in Danish general practice. The 15-Method combines evidence-based approaches from specialized addiction treatment with screening and readily available treatment options in general practice to help identify and treat alcohol problems in a primary care setting. The method has shown promising results as a treatment tool in Sweden. A feasibility study of the 15-Method in Denmark suggested that the method can be implemented in Danish general practice. The trial is led by the Unit for Clinical Alcohol Research at The University of Southern Denmark in collaboration with The Research Unit of General Practice Odense at The University of Southern Denmark.

NCT ID: NCT05865847 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Alcohol-Related Disorders

Socioeconomic Differences in Alcohol Harm in Finland in a Nationwide Cohort Study

Start date: January 1, 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a nationwide cohort study of Finnish adults aged 25 and older, who are followed up for the incidence of an alcohol-attributable hospitalization or death. The primary objective is to examine the relative and absolute socioeconomic differences in cause-specific alcohol-attributable hospital admissions and deaths.

NCT ID: NCT05160233 Active, not recruiting - Opioid Use Disorder Clinical Trials

Digital Treatments for Opioids and Other Substance Use Disorders in Primary Care

DIGITS
Start date: December 9, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The DIGITS Trial addresses a critical knowledge gap: How to best implement digital treatments for opioids and other substance use disorders in primary care. The DIGITS Trial is a partnership between Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute (KPWHRI) in Seattle, and Kaiser Permanente Washington, a healthcare delivery system in Washington State. In this study, the FDA-authorized reSET and reSET-O digital therapeutics will be implemented in Kaiser Permanente Washington primary care clinics. The study will evaluate the extent to which two implementation strategy interventions, health coaching and practice coaching, improve the implementation. Primary care clinics are randomized to receive these implementation strategy interventions. Each clinic will have a 12-month active implementation period beginning on its date of randomization. To study the continued use of reSET and reSET-O after the active implementation period is completed, a sustainment period of up 12 months will follow the active implementation period.

NCT ID: NCT03695653 Active, not recruiting - Alcoholism Clinical Trials

Messaging Interventions to Reduce Alcohol Problems Project

MIRAP
Start date: May 24, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study is designed to develop and test a tailored adaptive text messaging/short message service (SMS) intervention for individuals interested in reducing their alcohol consumption. According to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, problem or risky drinking is defined as greater than 7 standard drinks per week for women and 14 standard drinks per week for men. Other groups have other criteria (e.g., 10 drinks for women and 14 for men per week). The Institute of Medicine reports that problem drinkers are those with mild-to-moderate problem severity who do not have physical dependence. Heavy drinking individuals with non-abstinence goals rarely seek treatment for excessive alcohol use, and newer methods such as internet screening and mobile apps provide opportunities to engage and treat this difficult to reach population. There are now 96 mobile phone contracts for every 100 people on earth, making mobile interventions a highly viable method for extending care beyond traditional methods. Text messaging or short message service (SMS) is the most widely available mode of mobile communication and despite its simplicity, has been proven to be a reliable and effective method to induce behavior change across behavioral health targets, including problem drinking. However, large scale randomized controlled trials are needed to provide the necessary empirical evidence to validate SMS interventions and understand the mediators and moderators of outcome for help seeking heavy drinkers who are using or unable to attend in-person care.

NCT ID: NCT03474328 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Alcohol-Related Disorders

AlcoChange: An Open Label Pilot Study of Smartphone Monitoring for Alcoholic Liver Disease

Start date: April 25, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Alcohol contributes to over 5% of deaths worldwide, and death rates from alcohol-related liver disease (ARLD) in the UK continue to rise sharply. On-going alcohol use in ARLD leads to markedly increased mortality (Thursz et al, 2015), and maintaining abstinence is a key therapeutic goal. However, there are no effective pharmacological therapies for maintaining abstinence. Brief intervention (BI) is an effective psychological tool for reducing alcohol use, but is difficult to scale widely. AlcoChange is a smartphone app and breathalyser (AlcoChange), which facilitates self-monitoring and delivers BIs in response to patient triggers. The aim of this open-label study is provide AlcoChange to 60 patients with ARLD, to determine compliance with the app/breathalyser and changes in self-reported alcohol consumption. Recruitment of inpatients/outpatients with ARLD and recent alcohol use will take place at Royal Free London. The inclusion criteria are: intent to maintain abstinence, possession of compatible smartphone. The exclusion criteria are: inability to provide consent. Participants will be assessed at baseline and 3-months. The primary endpoint is self-reported alcohol use (units/week, timeline follow-back). Secondary endpoint is compliance with the app (monitored remotely).

NCT ID: NCT01655615 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Substance Related Disorders

Does Delaying Adolescent Substance Use Lead to Improved Cognitive Function and Reduce Risk for Addiction?

Start date: September 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The Preventure Program is the first and only school-based alcohol and drug prevention program that has been shown to prevent onset and growth in alcohol and substance misuse in British and Canadian youth. Unlike universal programs that tend to promote generic coping skills and balance normative attitudes around substance use, this selected personality-targeted approach is based on a psychosocial model and validated by Dr Patricia Conrod and targets four personality-specific motivational pathways to substance misuse: Hopelessness, Anxiety Sensitivity, Impulsivity and Sensation Seeking, each associated with different motives for substance use, drug use profiles and patterns of non-addictive psychopathology. As a primary goal of the Coventure project, the investigators propose a long-term trial of this intervention strategy to examine how this evidence-based intervention can reduce onset of substance use disorders in young people and related secondary mental health, academic and cognitive outcomes. As a secondary goal, the investigators propose to use sensitive neuropsychological measures to examine how this evidence-based intervention can positively impact on cognitive development over the course of adolescence, to tease apart some of the mechanisms involved in the causal pathway from early onset substance use to poor cognitive development and long-term addiction outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT01318538 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Substance-Related Disorders

Recovery Group for Women With Substance Use Disorders

Start date: August 2008
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to conduct a randomized controlled Stage II trial of the Women's Recovery Group (WRG) in a larger, more diverse sample of women than characterized that of the investigators' Stage I trial. The current study is being conducted at two sites. The investigators will compare 12 weekly sessions in an open-enrollment format of the women-focused, single-gender WRG versus an equivalent amount of the active comparison treatment, mixed-gender Group Drug Counseling (GDC). In addition to testing the efficacy of the WRG, the investigators' second aim will be to investigate a priori hypotheses regarding potential moderators (e.g., psychiatric severity, self-efficacy) and mediators (e.g., engagement in ancillary treatment and community support) of treatment outcome. Finally, the investigators will conduct exploratory analyses of group process characteristics of the WRG identified during the Stage I trial and explore differences in group process between single-gender WRG and mixed-gender GDC groups.

NCT ID: NCT00094289 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Cocaine-Related Disorders

Interactions Between Cocaine and Ethanol and Disulfiram - 1

Start date: August 2004
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to assess potential interactions between intravenous cocaine and ethanol and oral disulfiram.