View clinical trials related to Alcohol Use.
Filter by:The goal of this project is to examine whether, relative to standard care, violence and alcohol use outcomes can be improved by a brief, motivationally based adjunct alcohol treatment for men enrolled in batterer intervention programs. We hypothesize that men randomized to also receive the brief alcohol intervention will have better partner violence and alcohol use outcomes than men who are randomized to the batterer intervention program alone.
This application is a competing continuation of a grant in which we developed and pilot tested a computerized Therapeutic Workplace designed to train and employ adults as data entry operators. A randomized trial is planned over 5 years to investigate the Therapeutic Workplace business as a maintenance intervention to sustain long-term abstinence and employment. Welfare recipients in methadone treatment, actively using cocaine, and at risk for contracting or spreading HIV infection will participate in an initial Therapeutic Workplace training phase. Participants who become abstinent and skilled will be randomly assigned to an Abstinence & Employment, or an Employment Only group. Participants in the Abstinence & Employment group will be employed for one year in a Therapeutic Workplace business and will have to provide drug-free urine samples to work and earn salary. Employment Only participants will be offered employment for one year, but these participants will not have to provide drug-free urine samples to work. This study will provide a rigorous evaluation of the efficacy of the Therapeutic Workplace business as a long-term treatment of cocaine addiction and unemployment; determine the benefits of requiring daily evidence of abstinence to work; and provide information on the extent to which a Therapeutic Workplace business can become self-sustaining. This research could provide firm scientific foundation for the dissemination of Therapeutic Workplace businesses in the long-term treatment of cocaine addiction and unemployment. The main hypothesis being tested is that cocaine abstinence will be reliably maintained during the yearlong intervention evaluation period only in the group exposed to the explicit abstinence maintenance intervention. We expect that cocaine abstinence in the Abstinence and Employment group will be significantly greater than cocaine abstinence in the Employment Only group.
This project provides stepped care to college students mandated for alcohol-related offenses. Students are first provided with a minimal intervention, a 15-minute discussion of their alcohol use. Students who continue to drink in a risky manner are provided with a more intensive, hour-long brief motivational interview. By providing more intensive treatment to the students who exhibit risky drinking, we hope to maximize the efficiency of campus alcohol programs.
The purpose of this study is to examine the efficacy of a brief motivational intervention for alcohol use in incarcerated women.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether a brief alcohol intervention reduces alcohol use and improves depression among depressed patients.
Disability and death from injury remain a persistent problem in the U.S. and risk-taking behaviors are known to contribute to injury. Healthy People 2010 set goals to reduce deaths caused by injury: "Motor vehicle crashes are often predictable and preventable. Increased use of seat belts and reductions in driving while impaired are two of the most effective means to reduce the risk of death and serious injury of occupants in motor vehicle crashes." One preventive strategy is to establish screening and intervention procedures that can be administered in the ED to young adults who have risky driving practices and problem drinking. Goal: The specific aim of this prospective, randomized controlled trial is to test the effectiveness of a brief intervention to limit risky driving behaviors (risky driving practices, lack of seat belt compliance) and problem drinking in drivers during an ED visit. In addition, the trial will result in a benefit-cost analysis from the perspectives of both society as a whole and hospitals in particular. Methods: Young adults 18 to 44 years will be screened for problem drinking and risky driving practices during an ED visit. Subjects who screen positive for problem drinking and risky driving will be randomized to one of three groups: No Contact Control Group (NCG: after informed consent, subjects receive no screening or intervention until 12 months after injury). Contact Control Group (CCG: subjects screened at baseline and every three months for 12 months but no intervention), and a Brief Intervention Group (BIG: subjects receive screening and brief intervention with data collection points every three months for 12 months). A total of 133 subjects per group (N=400) will be enrolled. The intervention will consist of a 20 minute nurse visit in the ED and a booster intervention at 7-10 days after ED discharge. All subjects will be telephoned at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months by interviewers blinded to condition. Outcomes of interest include reported alcohol use, risky driving behaviors, driving citations, adverse health outcomes, and costs (health care utilization, property damage, travel delays, lost work productivity, criminal justice expenses, and monetarized adverse health outcomes). Analysis: Power analysis suggests that 133 subjects in each arm of the trial will have sufficient power to detect a difference of the main outcome variables of interest. A variety of regression techniques, including individual growth curve modeling and event history analysis, will be used to test the proposed hypotheses.