Promoting alcohol treatment engagement post-hospitalization with brief intervention, medications and CBT4CBT: protocol for a randomized clinical trial in a diverse patient population

被引:4
|
作者
Edelman, E. Jennifer [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Rojas-Perez, Oscar F. [4 ]
Nich, Charla [4 ]
Corvino, Joanne [4 ]
Frankforter, Tami [4 ]
Gordon, Derrick [4 ,5 ]
Jordan, Ayana [6 ]
Paris Jr, Manuel
Weimer, Melissa B. [1 ,2 ,7 ]
Yates, Brian T. [8 ]
Williams, Emily C. [9 ,10 ]
Kiluk, Brian D. [2 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Yale Sch Med, Dept Internal Med, 367 Cedar St,Harkness Mem Hall,Suite 401, New Haven, CT 06510 USA
[2] Yale Sch Med, Yale Program Addict Med, New Haven, CT 06510 USA
[3] Yale Sch Med, Dept Obstet Gynecol & Reprod Sci, New Haven, CT 06510 USA
[4] Yale Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, New Haven, CT USA
[5] Consultat Ctr, New Haven, CT 06517 USA
[6] NYU Langone Hlth, Dept Psychiat, New York, NY USA
[7] Yale Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Chron Dis Epidemiol, New Haven, CT USA
[8] American Univ, Dept Psychol, Washington, DC USA
[9] Univ Washington, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Syst & Populat Hlth, Seattle, WA USA
[10] Vet Hlth Adm VA, Hlth Serv Res Dev Seattle Denver Ctr Innovat Vet C, Seattle, WA USA
关键词
Alcohol use disorder; Implementation science; Clinical trial protocol; Racialized and ethnic minoritized communities; COGNITIVE-BEHAVIORAL THERAPY; COMPUTER-ASSISTED DELIVERY; SUBSTANCE-USE DISORDERS; RE-AIM FRAMEWORK; PRIMARY-CARE; EMERGENCY-DEPARTMENT; PREVENTIVE-SERVICES; COUNSELING INTERVENTIONS; PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES; COST-EFFECTIVENESS;
D O I
10.1186/s13722-023-00407-9
中图分类号
R194 [卫生标准、卫生检查、医药管理];
学科分类号
摘要
BackgroundAlcohol use disorder (AUD) commonly causes hospitalization, particularly for individuals disproportionately impacted by structural racism and other forms of marginalization. The optimal approach for engaging hospitalized patients with AUD in treatment post-hospital discharge is unknown. We describe the rationale, aims, and protocol for Project ENHANCE (ENhancing Hospital-initiated Alcohol TreatmeNt to InCrease Engagement), a clinical trial testing increasingly intensive approaches using a hybrid type 1 effectiveness-implementation approach.MethodsWe are randomizing English and/or Spanish-speaking individuals with untreated AUD (n = 450) from a large, urban, academic hospital in New Haven, CT to: (1) Brief Negotiation Interview (with referral and telephone booster) alone (BNI), (2) BNI plus facilitated initiation of medications for alcohol use disorder (BNI + MAUD), or (3) BNI + MAUD + initiation of computer-based training for cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT4CBT, BNI + MAUD + CBT4CBT). Interventions are delivered by Health Promotion Advocates. The primary outcome is AUD treatment engagement 34 days post-hospital discharge. Secondary outcomes include AUD treatment engagement 90 days post-discharge and changes in self-reported alcohol use and phosphatidylethanol. Exploratory outcomes include health care utilization. We will explore whether the effectiveness of the interventions on AUD treatment engagement and alcohol use outcomes differ across and within racialized and ethnic groups, consistent with disproportionate impacts of AUD. Lastly, we will conduct an implementation-focused process evaluation, including individual-level collection and statistical comparisons between the three conditions of costs to providers and to patients, cost-effectiveness indices (effectiveness/cost ratios), and cost-benefit indices (benefit/cost ratios, net benefit [benefits minus costs). Graphs of individual- and group-level effectiveness x cost, and benefits x costs, will portray relationships between costs and effectiveness and between costs and benefits for the three conditions, in a manner that community representatives also should be able to understand and use.ConclusionsProject ENHANCE is expected to generate novel findings to inform future hospital-based efforts to promote AUD treatment engagement among diverse patient populations, including those most impacted by AUD.Clinical Trial Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT05338151.ConclusionsProject ENHANCE is expected to generate novel findings to inform future hospital-based efforts to promote AUD treatment engagement among diverse patient populations, including those most impacted by AUD.Clinical Trial Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT05338151.
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页数:16
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