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Brief Intervention for Drug Misuse in the Emergency Department

Phase 2
Completed
Conditions
Hepatitis B
Hepatitis C
Brief Intervention
Substance Abuse Detection
HIV Infections
HIV
Interventions
Behavioral: Brief motivational intervention
Registration Number
NCT01124591
Lead Sponsor
Rhode Island Hospital
Brief Summary

Although screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) approaches are effective in reducing alcohol misuse and its associated risk-taking behaviors and negative consequences, there is little research demonstrating the effectiveness of SBIRT for illicit and/or prescription drug misuse. Misusers of illicit and/or prescription drugs frequently seek medical care in emergency departments (EDs), particularly for reasons related to their misuse. As a result, the ED is well suited as a site to conduct an analysis of the effectiveness of SBIRT for this population.

The Brief Intervention for Drug Misuse for the Emergency Department (BIDMED) study is a randomized, controlled, trial that will include adult ED patients at a large, academic, trauma center (Rhode Island Hospital) and a community hospital (The Miriam Hospital) who have a subcritical illness or injury and whose screening indicates illicit and/or prescription drug misuse. BIDMED participants will be randomized to receive screening only (SO) or brief intervention (BI) with appropriate referral to treatment. Participants will complete a battery of blinded baseline assessments using standardized instruments as well as adapted instruments specific to the aims of this study. All participants will undergo blinded follow-up assessments at three, six, and twelve months post-randomization. The primary hypotheses addressed in the BIDMED study are that, compared to participants in the SO arm, participants in the BI arm will show a significantly greater reduction in: (1) drug misuse within the prior 30 days at three months post-randomization, (2) behaviors associated with drug misuse at six months post-randomization; and (3) negative physical health, psychosocial health, and socioeconomic consequences at twelve months post-randomization. As a secondary aim, the impact of BI compared to SO will be assessed on participants contacting, enrolling in, and completing a drug treatment program. In addition, the impact of BI compared to SO on increasing uptake of HIV and hepatitis B/C screening will be measured. A mechanisms of change model that addresses the expected mediators and moderators of change to explain the effects of SBIRT in this setting will also be developed and tested. Further, the epidemiology of illicit and/or prescription drug misuse will be assessed in a random sample of ED patients.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
1030
Inclusion Criteria
  • Self-report of illicit and/or prescription drug misuse in the past three-months. Presenting at the emergency department for medical care.
Exclusion Criteria

Not age appropriate, in custody, medically unstable, actively psychotic, suicidal

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
FACTORIAL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
TreatmentBrief motivational interventionAssessment and brief intervention
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Reduction in behaviors associated with drug misuse12 months post-randomization
Reduction in past 30 day drug misuse12 months post-randomization
Reduction negative physical health, psychosocial health, and socioeconomic consequences12 months post-randomization
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Uptake of HIV and hepatitis B/C screening3 months post randomization

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Rhode Island Hospital

🇺🇸

Providence, Rhode Island, United States

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