Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE2
758 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2010-06-30
2015-04-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Minimal Intervention Control. All patients that give consent to participate in the study ("participants") who are randomly assigned to the control condition will complete the computerized DARSSA for assessment purposes only. The reports will not be printed or dynamic referrals generated, and all patients will receive treatment-as-usual by their ED providers. This will preserve the treatment-as-usual nature of the baseline while maintaining consistency in the administration of the DARSSA between phases of the study. Although ED clinicians will know that a study is being conducted in the ED, they will not be informed of the results of the research assessment, nor will they be given any instruction or training beforehand to change their standard screening, counseling, and referral practices. This means that substance use screening is likely to be inconsistent and counseling or referrals by provider rare. To maintain ethical standards, the RAs will provide a substance abuse treatment resource list (passive referral list) to all subjects who screen positive, even though this often does not happen during routine clinical practice. Additionally, suicidal ideation is not directly assessed as part of the study, but it is possible that participants will spontaneously report suicidal ideation. If this happens, the RA will notify the treating physician. Both of these efforts could conceivably introduce interventions the patient may not otherwise have received, but there is no viable alternative if the investigators are to ensure patient safety.
DARSSA Intervention. All participants randomized to the DARSSA Intervention will be given instructions for how to complete the assessment. Since the DARSSA is self-administered and, like all Polaris products, does not require computer literacy, instructions will be simple and do not require a clinician to administer. Once completed, the treating emergency physician will be expected to (1) give substance using patients the Patient Feedback Report, (2) recommend they review it carefully, and (3) encourage them to consider following up with the referrals. Any additional assessment or counseling will be optional and left to individual provider practice. We considered creating a standardized counseling protocol but decided against it. We want to maintain an ecologically valid evaluation. In the "real world," providers would not be given extensive health behavior counseling training or asked to follow a standardized counseling protocol when implementing the DARSSA. Training providers on health behavior counseling would act as an additional intervention in its own right, and it could potentially mask our ability to determine what effect the DARSSA alone is having.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Minimal Intervention Control
All patients that give consent to participate in the study ("participants") who are randomly assigned to the control condition will complete the computerized DARSSA for assessment purposes only. The reports will not be printed or dynamic referrals generated, and all patients will receive treatment-as-usual by their ED providers.
Self-administered computerized assessment for tobacco, substance abuse, and alcohol use.
All patients that give consent to participate in the study ("participants") who are randomly assigned to the control condition will complete the computerized DARSSA for assessment purposes only.
DARSSA Intervention
All participants randomized to the DARSSA Intervention will be given instructions for how to complete the assessment. Once completed, the treating emergency physician will be expected to (1) give substance using patients the Patient Feedback Report, (2) recommend they review it carefully, and (3) encourage them to consider following up with the referrals.
Self-Administered Computerized Assessment and Counseling for Tobacco, Alcohol, and Substance Abuse
All participants randomized to the DARSSA Intervention will be given instructions for how to complete the assessment. Once completed, the treating emergency physician will be expected to (1) give substance using patients the Patient Feedback Report, (2) recommend they review it carefully, and (3) encourage them to consider following up with the referrals.
Interventions
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Self-administered computerized assessment for tobacco, substance abuse, and alcohol use.
All patients that give consent to participate in the study ("participants") who are randomly assigned to the control condition will complete the computerized DARSSA for assessment purposes only.
Self-Administered Computerized Assessment and Counseling for Tobacco, Alcohol, and Substance Abuse
All participants randomized to the DARSSA Intervention will be given instructions for how to complete the assessment. Once completed, the treating emergency physician will be expected to (1) give substance using patients the Patient Feedback Report, (2) recommend they review it carefully, and (3) encourage them to consider following up with the referrals.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
* hostile or agitated behavior
* sexual assault victims
* trauma patients who are on backboards or who must remain supine
* severe illness that would preclude conversation or interface with a computer (e.g., intubation, persistent vomiting, severe pain)
* or factors precluding follow-up, like transient residence or lack of a telephone.
18 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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University of Massachusetts, Worcester
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Edwin Boudreaux
Study Principle Investigator
Principal Investigators
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Edwin Boudreaux, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
UMass Medical School
Locations
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UMass Memorial Medical Center - university campus
Worcester, Massachusetts, United States
Countries
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References
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Haskins BL, Davis-Martin R, Abar B, Baumann BM, Harralson T, Boudreaux ED. Health Evaluation and Referral Assistant: A Randomized Controlled Trial of a Web-Based Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment System to Reduce Risky Alcohol Use Among Emergency Department Patients. J Med Internet Res. 2017 May 1;19(5):e119. doi: 10.2196/jmir.6812.
Boudreaux ED, Abar B, Haskins B, Bauman B, Grissom G. Health evaluation and referral assistant: a randomized controlled trial to improve smoking cessation among emergency department patients. Addict Sci Clin Pract. 2015 Nov 5;10:24. doi: 10.1186/s13722-015-0045-2.
Other Identifiers
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H-13419
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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