Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00127231

Brief Therapy Intervention for Heavy/Hazardous Drinking in HIV-Positive Women

Brief Alcohol Intervention in HIV+ Women

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
148 (actual)
Sponsor
Johns Hopkins University · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether two brief counseling sessions reduce drinking and improve health outcomes in HIV-positive women who drink at heavy/hazardous levels. Also, the study seeks to compare hazardous drinking versus nonhazardous drinking women on a variety of alcohol, HIV and life quality outcome measures.

Detailed description

Heavy alcohol use negatively impacts HIV/AIDS in several important ways. It increases HIV-risk behaviors, impairs the immune system and accelerates HIV disease progression. Heavy alcohol use also interferes with HIV care compliance, including appointment attendance and medication adherence. Women are particularly important targets for alcohol use interventions. The threshold for harmful alcohol effects is strikingly low in women, with two drinks per day placing women at risk for negative health consequences. Heavy/hazardous alcohol use is less likely to be detected in women receiving health services. Women may be less likely to seek and or engage in alcohol treatment services, making nontraditional care settings particularly important for reaching this population. This proposal tests the utility of a brief alcohol intervention for HIV+ women delivered in a medical setting. Hazardous/binge female drinkers will be identified in the Johns Hopkins Hospital HIV clinic and will be randomized to brief intervention or standard care. The brief intervention will include two sessions that review drinking patterns and behavior change strategies as well as two telephone calls to reinforce session content. In addition, a comparison group of nonhazardous drinking, HIV+ women will be recruited. Outcome measures will include: alcohol/drug use, engagement in an on-site alcohol support group and other substance abuse treatment services, HIV-risk behaviors, HIV disease markers and treatment compliance, and psychiatric symptoms. The investigators hypothesize that women who receive the brief intervention will report lower mean weekly alcohol consumption and fewer heavy drinking episodes than women in standard care. The investigators also predict that women who receive brief intervention will adhere to their HIV medications and keep their health care appointments more consistently, and have improved HIV-related health outcomes. Finally, the investigators hypothesize that nonhazardous drinkers will have fewer psychiatric symptoms and better quality of life than hazardous drinking women. Comparison(s): Standard HIV care

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALBrief alcohol intervention based on Project TreatThe brief intervention will include two sessions that review drinking patterns and behavior change strategies as well as two telephone calls to reinforce session content.
BEHAVIORALStandard careHazardous/binge female drinkers will be identified in the Johns Hopkins Hospital HIV clinic and will be randomized to brief intervention or standard care. Outcome measures will include: alcohol/drug use, engagement in an on-site alcohol support group and other substance abuse treatment services, HIV-risk behaviors, HIV disease markers and treatment compliance, and psychiatric symptoms.

Timeline

Start date
2007-09-01
Primary completion
2010-11-01
Completion
2010-11-01
First posted
2005-08-05
Last updated
2017-12-06
Results posted
2017-12-06

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00127231. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.