Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04725552

Identifying and Managing Alcohol-related Health Problems in General Practice

Testing the Feasibility of Pragmatic Case Finding and a Supplemental Digital Intervention for Alcohol-related Health Problems in General Practice

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
40 (actual)
Sponsor
Helse Stavanger HF · Other Government
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 99 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The overall purpose of the proposed research is to increase patients' and general practitioners' (GPs') awareness of alcohol as a relevant factor for a wide variety of health problems in general practice, and enable earlier help and treatment. To achieve this, the investigators aim to test the feasibility of a pragmatic strategy for identification of alcohol-related health problems, and the feasibility of a web-based intervention between consultations, as a supplement to usual care in general practice.

Detailed description

Alcohol use is a major health problem, and there is a strong need for improved identification of and interventions for alcohol-related health problems. These constitute somatic and neuropsychiatric health problems, caused, precipitated, or complicated by alcohol use. The investigators will especially recruit patients in late adulthood (60+), as this group may experience more barriers with digital interventions, and will have more health problems potentially affected by alcohol. The investigators have developed the identification strategy and the interventions in close collaboration with key stakeholders: patients and health care professionals. The aim is to test the feasibility of interventions for hazardous (a quantity or pattern placing patients at risk for adverse health events) and harmful alcohol consumption (consumption resulting in adverse events), with two distinct components, namely pragmatic case finding and a digital self-administered intervention (called Endre) for use between consultations. The study will focus mainly on aspects related to acceptability, demand, implementation and practicality. The results from this feasibility study may give valuable knowledge on how this treatment approach should be adapted and implemented, and will indicate whether a full-scale RCT is warranted. This study is testing the feasibility of interventions intended to facilitate change for both patients (reduced alcohol consumption) and for physicians (improved addressing of alcohol and improved intervention delivery).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORAL'Change' - an e-health interventionThe aim of the e-health intervention is to support the patient's change process and facilitate the doctor's ability to help. We plan for a web-application instead of a native application. A web-application enables use from mobile devices and from computers and is thus not dependent on a specific mode or system. Before including patients (postponed to September 2020 because of the Corona-virus pandemic), about 30 members of the general public have tested the e-health intervention.

Timeline

Start date
2020-10-01
Primary completion
2021-12-31
Completion
2022-12-31
First posted
2021-01-26
Last updated
2024-03-15

Locations

4 sites across 1 country: Norway

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04725552. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.