Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to examine the efficacy of a brief motivational intervention for alcohol use in incarcerated women.


Clinical Trial Description

Hazardous alcohol use continues to be a problem of major significance throughout the United States. Alcohol use is a prevalent condition that independently acts as an important behavioral cofactor for HIV infection in women, contributing to both sexual and drug risk. The rationale for a brief intervention with incarcerated women who hazardously use alcohol and have HIV risk behaviors is compelling. For such women, we believe that the negative effects of drinking may be increased. An intervention that successfully connects alcohol use with HIV risk behaviors may be sufficient to tip the decisional balance in favor of reducing risk-prone alcohol consumption. If alcohol consumption is reduced more generally in a person's life, this may improve judgment in pursuing behaviors which risk other negative consequences. Hazardous alcohol, and high-risk drug and sexual activities may be manifestations of a general behavior pattern among incarcerated women, and strategies that engage such individuals are needed. Given the strong association between hazardous alcohol use and high HIV risk sexual and drug activities, interventions that attempt to lower the prevalence of HIV drug and sexual risk activities by lowering alcohol consumption are well justified. Brief alcohol interventions have been efficacious in reducing alcohol use across many populations over the past decade.

Comparison(s): Participants are assigned, in this 6 month study, to an assessment-only condition or an assessment plus motivational interview condition. Two motivational interview sessions are conducted during the first month of study participation. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00237003
Study type Interventional
Source Butler Hospital
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 3
Start date September 2003
Completion date August 2009

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05606601 - An Online Intervention Addressing Mental Health and Substance Use in University Students N/A
Completed NCT01668992 - Impact Evaluation of a Family-based Intervention With Burmese Migrant and Displaced Children and Families in Tak Province, Thailand N/A
Completed NCT01679236 - Pilot Study on Mindfulness for Tobacco and Alcohol in University Students Phase 0
Withdrawn NCT00914719 - Alcohol Use and Sexual Risk: An Intervention N/A
Terminated NCT05274217 - Journey of Transformation Curriculum for Native American Adolescents N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05372042 - CBT Texts for PTSD & Hazardous Drinking (Project Better) N/A
Completed NCT03855410 - Preventing Cigarette Use Among Urban Youth Via an M-Health Primary Care Preventive Intervention N/A
Completed NCT01970293 - AA Linkage for Alcohol Abusing Women Leaving Jail N/A
Completed NCT01934803 - Zinc for HIV Disease Among Alcohol Users - an RCT in the Russia ARCH Cohort N/A
Completed NCT01694082 - Brief Web-Based Alcohol Reduction Intervention for Undergraduates N/A
Completed NCT00247182 - Stepped Care for Mandated College Students Phase 1
Completed NCT00249496 - Employment-based Reinforcement to Motivate Drug Abstinence in the Treatment of Drug Addiction. - 1 N/A
Withdrawn NCT03938077 - A Community-University Approach to Preventing HIV N/A
Recruiting NCT06124898 - Multi-Component Breath Alcohol Intervention N/A
Completed NCT02938377 - Alcohol Research Consortium in HIV-Intervention Research Arm Phase 4
Recruiting NCT05087875 - Evaluating an mHealth Intervention for Reducing Alcohol Use Among Rural Adolescent and Young Adult Cancer Survivors N/A
Completed NCT02963818 - Smartphone Technology: Young Adult Drinking Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT02530645 - Development and Testing of a Smartphone Application to Reduce Substance Use and Sexual Risk Among Homeless Young Adults N/A
Completed NCT01740115 - Boston Alcohol Research Collaboration on HIV/AIDS (ARCH) Cohort N/A
Completed NCT01614626 - Alcohol's Impact on Inflammatory Markers in HIV Disease - Russia ARCH Cohort