Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03194295

Activating Community Support for Substance Users

Activating Personal Network Support in Treatment Seeking Substance Users

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
49 (actual)
Sponsor
Johns Hopkins University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
21 Years – 75 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Efforts to improve methadone maintenance outcomes are often thwarted by strong social networks that reinforce substance use and other risk behaviors. The proposed study the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of a practical community support intervention that employs an alteration model of social network change. The intervention works with patients and at least one drug-free family or friend to support participation in community activities designed to mobilize recovery support and expand personal drug-free social networks.

Detailed description

Opioid-dependent individuals in methadone maintenance have high rates of illicit drug and alcohol use. The individual and public health concerns of poorly and partially treated substance use include social, medical, psychiatric, and healthcare costs. Efforts to improve outcomes are often thwarted by strong social networks that reinforce substance use and other high-risk drug use and sexual behaviors. Many urban substance users lack the financial resources to simply move away from adverse community influences. While clinical providers are well aware of the power of social network influences, existing research provides relatively little direction about how to help substance users change "people, places, and things." An under-explored strategy to achieve this desired outcome is to mobilize social support found in the personal social networks of people with substance use disorder. A considerable amount of research demonstrates that people with substance use disorder routinely have drug-free family or friends in their social networks, and that these individuals are terribly underutilized for supporting recovery efforts. Social support is reliably associated with good health behaviors and more positive and sustained substance abuse treatment outcomes. The inclusion of drug-free family and friends also provides a pathway to modify social networks by facilitating activity with other drug-free people within and outside of the patient's social network. This type of work supports an alteration model of network change. This protocol uses an alteration model to develop a promising 12-week community support intervention designed to activate and harness the powerful influences of drug-free family and friends to enhance recovery support and participation in community activities. This highly structured and manual-guided therapeutic group works with patients and at least one drug-free family member or friend (community support person -- CSP) to expand the quantity and quality of the patients' drug-free social network, and to reduce and eliminate interactions with active drug users. This outcome is achieved via a series of "homework" assignments that require the patient and CSP to participate together in two drug-free activities per week that include the presence of other drug-free individuals (e.g., Narcotics Anonymous (NA)/Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), religious activities), and to discuss their experiences within the group setting. This intervention will be compared to Standard Care that includes a substance abuse education group with weekly homework. Specific aims evaluate feasibility outcomes and the extent to which the intervention supports an alteration model. Short-term efficacy will be assessed using measures of perceived social support and network support for abstinence. Secondary outcomes will evaluate substance use and psychosocial outcomes. Data will support a larger-scale randomized clinical trial (RCT) better isolating the clinical benefits of activating existing social support and facilitating community involvement.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALCommunity Support Intervention GroupThis 12-week community support intervention is designed to activate and harness the powerful influences of drug-free family and friends to enhance recovery support and participation in community activities. Addiction Treatment Services (ATS) participants and their CSPs will be directed to participate in recovery-oriented community activities together 2 times per week and work together toward developing regular drug-free social support for the ATS participant. The group provides an opportunity for both the participant and CSP to discuss their experiences participating in the scheduled activities. For those electing not to engage in community activities, problem-solving strategies will be used to remove obstacles to participation, with other group members providing support and encouragement.
BEHAVIORALSubstance Use Disorder Educational GroupThis 12-week educational group is designed as an attention-control group. Group topics include: 1) definition of substance dependence, 2) the disease model, 3) medical aspects, 4) mood, 5) personality, 6) self-esteem, 7) relapse prevention, 8) HIV/AIDS, 9) anger, 10) negative thinking, 11) nutrition, and 12) assertiveness. Participants will be assigned 2 homework assignments each week based on the topic.

Timeline

Start date
2018-01-10
Primary completion
2020-03-16
Completion
2020-03-16
First posted
2017-06-21
Last updated
2020-09-21

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03194295. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.