Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04064749 |
Other study ID # |
HP-00084892 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
November 1, 2019 |
Est. completion date |
December 31, 2023 |
Study information
Verified date |
April 2024 |
Source |
University of Maryland, Baltimore |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
This study will implement a brief intervention with text messaging and will test its
effectiveness in reducing gambling behavior and improving financial well-being among credit
counseling clients who seek services.
Financial counseling organizations provide a community-based environment for screening and
brief intervention for gambling-related problems as gambling problems are fundamentally about
financial losses. The study holds the promise of expanding brief interventions for gambling
to individuals outside the health care system and in so doing, help those at-risk who do not
present for formal treatment.
Description:
The randomized control trial is designed to test the effectiveness of a unique brief
intervention for at-risk gambling within a national financial counseling organization.
Individuals who call the program for credit counseling and financial support will be asked a
brief screen for problem gambling by a trained financial advocate (i.e. credit counselor).
Individuals who are eligible for the study will be provided with information about the study
by their financial advocate and asked if they would be willing to have a researcher at
University of Maryland School of Social Work (UMSSW) contact them to tell them more about
information about the study and review informed consent.
If the person wants to learn more about the study, a member of the research team at UMSSW
will contact the individual, who will review the informed consent with the individual and
answer questions. After obtaining their consent, the researcher will randomize the individual
to either Group 1 (control) or Group 2 (intervention). A randomization matrix will be
prepopulated in advance so that the researcher will assign the individual based on the next
group assignment. If the individual is randomly assigned to Group 1, the researcher will
proceed by asking the baseline/Time 1 interview questions. They will not receive any
additional intervention.
If the individual is randomly assigned to Group 2, the researcher will proceed by providing
the brief intervention. The brief intervention includes providing feedback on the
individual's gambling score; providing an educational fact about the relationship between
problem gambling and financial well-being; talking with the individual about the 'pros' and
'cons' of gambling with suggested strategies that could potentially reduce their gambling
behaviors; and concluding with an action oriented closing question. Following the
intervention, the researcher will then administer the baseline/Time 1 structured interview
questions.
For individuals who are assigned to the intervention group, they will also receive text
messages. The researchers will send text messages via pre-programmed, automated mode to the
client. Participants will receive up to five messages a week, and messages will be delivered
at times when gambling may be higher, such as weekend afternoons and evenings. Text messages
will be sent following baseline for one month, through the end of T2 (30-day post screening).
Individuals who agree to participate in the study and who are randomized to either group
(control or intervention) will complete three phone interviews by phone that inquire about
gambling behaviors, financial well-being, and mental health-seeking behavior. Phone
interviews will be administered at baseline (Time 1), 30 days (Time 2), and 90 days (Time 3)
following consent. The credit counseling program will also provide data from their initial
evaluation and screening from their records on individuals who take part in the intervention
(e.g., sociodemographic variables, financial information about assets and debt, and the
results of the gambling screen).