View clinical trials related to Tobacco Use Disorder.
Filter by:This study compares two methods of teaching the 5As (Ask, Advise, Assess, Assist, Arrange) for tobacco dependence treatment to medical students: 1) traditional medical education (TE), and 2) multi-modal education (MME). The MME arm builds upon the traditional curriculum at the medical school by providing a web-based instructional program, a role play, preceptor training, and a booster session. The hypotheses are that MME will outperform TE on observed 5As counseling skills on the Objective Structured Clinical Exam (OSCE); and MME will outperform TE on self-reported 5As counseling skills.
The purpose of this proposal is to compare the effectiveness of community health worker (CHW) support vs. usual primary care for helping chronically-ill, low-SES patients to improve control of chronic conditions. Upon enrollment each patient will select one of their multiple chronic conditions as a focus for the trial and work with his/her PCP to set a chronic disease management goal. Patients are then randomized to receive usual primary care vs. CHW support for moving towards that goal.
The proposed study is a Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial designed to test the sustainability of a previously developed, tested, effectively implemented tobacco control strategy—the CEASE intervention, employing state of the art tobacco dependence treatment for parents who smoke.
You are invited to participate in a research study at the VA Connecticut Healthcare System (West Haven campus) that examines whether a medication called galantamine can improve your learning and memory, and also help you to quit smoking. You have been invited to participate because you currently smoke cigarettes, and want to quit smoking. If you are eligible and agree to be in the study, your participation will last for approximately 8 weeks. To determine if galantamine (8 or 16 mg) is superior to placebo a) in reducing smoking self-administration in a human laboratory model and b) improving abstinence rates at the end of 4 weeks of treatment.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect of gemfibrozil on nicotine reinforcement and cue-elicited craving. Other objectives of this study include screening for the ability of gemfibrozil to aid smoking abstinence during a brief quit attempt and examining the validity of using laboratory measures of tobacco dependence to predict smoking abstinence. It is hypothesized that gemfibrozil will result in diminished nicotine reinforcement, an attenuated response to smoking cues, and an increase in smoking abstinence compared with placebo. It is also hypothesized that the laboratory measures will prove valid in predicting abstinence.
Emergency Departments (EDs) are a critical component of the U.S. healthcare system, treating over 119 million patients each year. While EDs have historically neglected tobacco control efforts, several recent studies have examined the feasibility and efficacy of implementing tobacco cessation in the ED. Work by our research team and others, has shown that tobacco treatment is both feasible and effective in the ED setting. Effective, evidence-based interventions for treating tobacco dependence have also been codified in the United States Public Health Service guidelines. Even brief interventions delivered by physicians and other healthcare providers can produce significant increases in cessation across diverse clinical settings (e.g., outpatient clinics, surgery units, EDs), and patient groups (cardiac, respiratory, general admissions). However, in clinical practice, delivery of tobacco interventions is inconsistent at best, particularly in non-primary care settings. This translational study uses an existing Emergency Department Information System (EDIS), to facilitate the identification of smokers and to enhance the provision of smoking cessation intervention materials and pharmacological adjuncts for patients receiving treatment in the ED. The EDIS tracks the geographic and chronologic progression of patients through the ED and contains triage and nursing notes, lab values, radiology reports and links to images, vital signs, embedded printable discharge instructions, and fax links to primary care provider (PCP) offices. Following recruitment of a baseline (care-as-usual) cohort (Step 1), the investigators will provide training to ED physicians and staff to improve the identification and treatment of smokers. Following Step 1, the investigators will make adaptations to the EDIS system that include smoking status tracking, tobacco treatment prompts and medication information panels for the emergency treating physician, and links to printable discharge instructions, quit-smoking medication information and referral to a pro-active phone follow-up counseling for enrolled smokers. A second cohort of participants (Step 2) will be enrolled after implementation is complete. Contemporaneous with Steps 1 and 2, participant cohorts will be recruited at a control site (UMass Medical) to control for potential effects of historical trends. This study represents a comprehensive systems-based translation of empirically supported tobacco treatment built into a widely used patient tracking platform (MedHost) maximizing the probability of developing a sustainable tobacco intervention that can be readily disseminated. Specific Aims A.1. To test the incremental efficacy of a modified Emergency Department Information System (EDIS) "MedHost", using a multiple-cohort design implemented in 2 steps. Two recruitment phases (baseline/care as usual and full implementation) will be used to assess the impact of EDIS enhancements on rates of identification and treatment of ED patients who smoke. The primary outcome is the difference in six-month abstinence between those recruited prior to program implementation (Baseline) versus those recruited when the program is fully implemented (Step 2). H1) Smokers enrolled during Step 2 at RIH will show significantly greater cessation at month 6 compared Step 1 and control site participants. A.2. To compare rates of smoker identification, physician intervention and follow up care for smoking cessation and use of quit-smoking medications among ED patients recruited before and after EDIS modification. H2) Compared to Step 1 and the control site, Step 2 will show significantly higher rates of smoker identification, physician intervention and follow-up for smoking, and use of quit-smoking medications. A.3. To investigate the effects of the EDIS enhancement on relevant behavioral and psychological constructs that may act as mediators of smoking behavior change ("Mechanisms of Action"), and the relationships of these potential mediators to smoking cessation (e.g., perceived risk, nicotine dependence; in Measures section). H3) Participants enrolled during Step 2 at RIH will show greater changes in posited mediational constructs than those enrolled in Step 1 and at the control site. A.4. To examine the incremental costs of implementation of the intervention and to conduct analyses of marginal cost effectiveness using cost-per-smoker-quit. (This aim is not hypothesis driven) Exploratory Aim: A.5. To examine ED physician and other health care providers (HCP) attitudes regarding the utility of the EDIS system for tobacco intervention. The investigators will conduct interviews with ED physicians and nurses to elicit their perceptions of the usefulness and helpfulness of the modified EDIS, and its effects on their perceived self-efficacy and motivation to provide tobacco intervention. The investigators will also solicit direct feedback on the modified platform and user interface.
The purpose of this study is to examine the implementation of two evidence-based intervention strategies of SBIRT (Generalist vs. Specialist) for adolescent alcohol, tobacco, other drug use, and HIV risk behaviors.
The proposed project will utilize perfusion functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), a functional candidate gene association approach (of dopaminergic addictions-targeted polymorphisms), and the dopamine-modulating and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) B receptor agonist, baclofen, to examine the brain and behavioral responses in smokers to appetitive smoking reminders (cues that motivate continued smoking and relapse). These studies will provide a means to identify an appetitive cue-sensitive pharmacologic-responsive endophenotype. Once brain/behavioral/genetic endophenotypes can be determined prior to treatment, smoking cessation treatments can be structured to meet individual needs, which will significantly improve treatment outcome.
The investigators aim to (1) examine the association between levels of progesterone (Prog), allopregnanolone (Allo), and the estradiol/progesterone (E2/P) ratios with smoking-related symptomatology during ad libitum smoking and (2) determine the association between Prog, Allo, and E2/P with the changes in smoking-related symptomatology and response to nicotine following overnight abstinence
This study examines the efficacy of yoga as a complementary therapy for smoking cessation