View clinical trials related to Opioid-Related Disorders.
Filter by:Persistent opioid abuse presents a common yet under-recognized problem given the decreasing rates of morbidity and mortality following common elective surgical procedures, like total joint arthroplasty (TJA). Each year around 33-70% of patients seeking surgical procedures in the U.S. transition to persistent opioid use following elective surgery (such as TJA), primarily prescribed for post-operative pain management. Further, these patients are more likely to demand greater doses and for longer duration post-surgery due to maladaptive neurologic changes occurring in key areas of the brain. The purpose of this study is to see if it is feasible to use OLP (open label placebo) for post-operative pain management in the post TJA setting. In addition the investigators will also collect pilot data to compare key outcome measures (patient reported physical function related to osteoarthritis of the hip and knee, pain score, and health-related quality of life will be assessed) between the placebo and the Treatment-As-Usual (TAU) group over a 90-day post-operative period.
The main aim of this study is to better understand whether yoga can be blended with mindfulness as an additional intervention for people receiving medication assisted treatment at a Hartford-based community agency. If this program is acceptable to participants, then additional studies can allow us to determine its impact on stress and cravings. This intervention, developed by the researchers, is called BEING.
Adults over 65 years of age are at higher risk of experiencing chronic pain and adverse events from opioids and opioid use disorder (OUD). Older adults are more likely to inadequately report their pain due to age-related health, which may lead to undertreatment of pain. In the last two decades, opioid prescriptions to treat chronic pain among older adults increased at a rate of nine times what it was previously. This surge is accompanied with a drastic increase of older adults visiting emergency departments due to opioid abuse, misuse, overdose, and addictions to heroin and cocaine. In consequence, chronic pain, opioids, and OUD have become a major crisis in the United States among older adults. The I-COPE program is an intervention that offers providers a set of smart tools for a more effective and efficient geriatric pain, opioid, and OUD management. The aim of the I-COPE program is to evaluate integration of shared decision-making, patient-centered clinical decision support tools, and Project ECHO® to address the critical need to integrate effective treatment for older adults with chronic pain, opioid use, and OUD. Patient-centered clinical decision support (PCCDS) tools provide clinicians with information presented at the right time and tailored to the individual patient, improving communications, care, and patient-provider satisfaction. Shared decision making (SDM) is a highly effective collaborative framework when there are many choices and there is uncertainty about the optimal treatment choice. Project ECHO® is a tested model for delivery of subspecialized medical knowledge to community clinicians. The research into these strategies is supported by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) through the opioid action plan (OAP) initiative. Based on the survey responses the PCCDS will develop a list of pain treatments that are preferable for older adults to use, based on their individual histories. From the PCCDS, an individualized patient action plan will be generated. The action plan will be clearly laid out, use patient-centered language at an ≤ 6th grade level, and simple graphics. It will feature the patient-reported overall goal, current pain rating and pain goal, as well as provide information on changes made to the chronic pain treatment plan. Information about signs of opioid side effects, misuse and opioid overdoses will be included for patients who are taking opioids, as well as instructions for naloxone administration.
The prevalence of opioid use disorder (OUD) and opioid-related deaths has risen dramatically in recent years. Effective treatments, including medications for opioid use disorder (MOUDs; e.g., buprenorphine-naloxone and methadone) are under-utilized. There are few evidence-based interventions for changing attitudes toward Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) in the general public and especially among healthcare clinicians. This study proposed an innovative intervention to change attitudes of Primary Care Clinicians (PCCs) toward persons with OUD. Study participants were stratified into one of two online learning courses: the intervention training was compared with an attention-control training.
The target population is students attending high schools in small rural towns in the 14 counties that partially or fully fall within the Cherokee Nation reservation. Following recruitment of 20 school-based clusters, clusters are allocated to either the intervention condition or delayed-intervention control condition using constrained randomization. Constrained randomization helps to ensure balanced cluster sizes as well as similar levels of risk between the intervention and control at baseline. Study participants include all10th grade students enrolled in the participating study high schools and students will be followed into the first year after their expected graduation.
Many people with substance use disorders struggle with decisions regarding whether to disclose to others that they have a history of substance use and/or are in recovery. Yet, these decisions are important because disclosures can lead to reactions from others that harm or help recovery. For example, stigmatizing responses can harm the mental health of people in recovery whereas supportive responses can strengthen people's commitment to their sobriety. We have developed a brief intervention to help people decide whether and how to tell others about their recovery as well as build skills for disclosure. The purpose of this study is to pilot test this intervention and test its acceptability and feasibility as well as determine if it shows preliminary signs of efficacy in comparison to a control condition. We hypothesize that: (1) participants exposed to the intervention condition will agree that the intervention is acceptable and feasible, and (2) participants in the intervention condition will report higher quality decision making in comparison to participants in the control condition.
This is a Phase 1, 6-month, open-label, multi-center study in parallel groups of randomized healthy volunteers to evaluate the pharmacokinetics and safety of BICX104 implantable subcutaneous naltrexone pellets and Vivitrol intramuscular depot naltrexone injection.
Thirty pregnant women with substance use disorder will be recruited to participate in eight sessions of MORE.
To conduct an 8-week pilot, randomized trial evaluating the feasibility, acceptability, and efficacy of an integrated intervention involving CBT4CBT-Buprenorphine + Recovery Coach in a population of 60 individuals who meet current DSM criteria for opioid use disorder and are receiving buprenorphine treatment in primary care.
Opioid overdoses are a significant problem nationwide and novel interventions that can prevent overdose by improving Buprenorphine/ Naloxone (B/N) treatment for opioid use disorder are a public health priority. This study will both investigate the effects of starting remote motivational enhancement during inpatient detoxification on rates of engagement in B/N treatment and evaluate the impact of MySafeRx, a mobile device application which integrates remote motivational coaching with daily observed dosing from secure electronic pill dispensers at home via videoconference, on treatment retention and overdose prevention. Broad dissemination of this new intervention could help communities across the nation expand and advance their capacity to increase B/N treatment engagement and retention, enhance medication adherence, and prevent overdose.