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Efficacy of Centervention-ATOD: An Implementation Tool for Dissemination of Evidence-based Programs for Substance Abuse (CV-ATOD)

3

3-C Institute

Status

Completed

Conditions

Substance Abuse

Treatments

Other: Centervention-ATOD (CV-ATOD)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Industry

Identifiers

NCT03084406
R44DA035014

Details and patient eligibility

About

The pilot test of Centervention-ATOD, a customizable suite of online tools specifically designed to support quality implementation and sustainability of any ATOD-EBP within real-world service settings, will evaluate whether the product awards additive benefits in provider implementation proficiency and efficacy, quality of implementation delivery, and EBP (i.e., Free Talk or CHOICE) outcomes compared to traditional implementation methods. Additionally, a cost-effectiveness study will be conducted to assess whether the implementation support strategy (i.e., Centervention-ATOD) is more cost-effective than traditional implementation methods.

Full description

Alcohol, tobacco, and other drug (ATOD) use among adolescents is a major public health problem with devastating personal, familial, and societal costs. Substance use in youth is associated with increased accidental injuries (including overdoses), psychiatric comorbidities, suicidality, school problems, juvenile delinquency, social and family problems, sexual impulsivity, and health consequences.A burgeoning neuroscience literature demonstrates ATOD use in youth is associated with a host of negative and potentially long-term sequelae, including alterations in brain structure, function, and neurocognition. Moreover, drug use in adolescence is the best predictor of abuse in adulthood; data published by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse reveal that 90% of adults who meet substance dependence criteria began using alcohol and drugs during adolescence. In the U.S., the economic impact of substance abuse is staggering: in 2005, federal, state, and local governments spent a combined $467 billion on the direct and indirect costs associated with addiction, rendering substance dependence the largest, costliest, and most preventable public health problem in the U.S. today.

Over the past few decades, significant progress has been made in the field of ATOD research in developing evidence-based practices (EBPs), with research demonstrating ATOD users who receive research-proven treatments are nearly 2.5 times more likely to achieve clinically significant post-treatment abstinence compared to those receiving non-evidence-based treatment. However, despite availability, EBPs are rarely adopted for use in everyday service settings. Further, even when adopted, considerable variation exists both in the quality with which EBPs are implemented and their long-term sustainability. Furthering our understanding of how efficacious treatment programs can be successfully introduced into real-world treatment settings is key to bridging this research-to-practice gap.

The pilot test of Centervention-ATOD, a customizable suite of online tools specifically designed to support quality implementation and sustainability of any ATOD-EBP within real-world service settings, will evaluate whether the product awards additive benefits in provider implementation proficiency and efficacy, quality of implementation delivery, and EBP (i.e., Free Talk or CHOICE) outcomes compared to traditional implementation methods. Additionally, a cost-effectiveness study will be conducted to assess whether the implementation support strategy (i.e., Centervention-ATOD) is more cost-effective than traditional implementation methods.

The pilot test will employ a Hybrid Type II study design[14] to simultaneously test the clinical evidence-based program as well as the implementation strategy. Regardless of the EBP implemented, 110 mental health (MH) providers will be randomly assigned to one of two conditions: (1) Enhanced implementation (EI) or (2) Implementation as Usual (IAU). Providers will either implement (a) Free Talk, a motivational interviewing group intervention with 5-8 youth per group over a six-week period or (b) CHOICE, a motivational interviewing group prevention program with 5-8 youth per group over a five-week period. Participating youth between ages 14-17 who may have experimented with alcohol or other drugs (AOD) will participate in the Free Talk intervention while youth between ages 11-15 who may or may not have used any substances will participate in the CHOICE prevention program. At the conclusion of the pilot test, a study of cost-effectiveness of the implementation support strategy (i.e., Centervention-ATOD) will be conducted with agency administrators of participating providers.

Enrollment

327 patients

Sex

All

Ages

11 to 65 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria: Community Mental Health (CMH) Providers

  • Licensed CMH Provider to youth between ages 14 -17 for Free Talk EI/TAU
  • Students enrolled in local University Clinical Programs for CHOICE EI/TAU

Inclusion Criteria: Youth

  • Between ages 14 -17 for Free Talk EI/TAU, Between ages 11 -14 for CHOICE EI/TAU
  • For Free Talk EI/TAU, youth may have experimented with or currently use alcohol or other drugs.
  • For CHOICE EI/TAU, youth may, or may not, have considered ATOD experimentation.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

327 participants in 2 patient groups

Enhanced Implementation (EI)
Experimental group
Description:
Providers in the Free Talk EI condition will receive access to CV-ATOD. They will participate in an online training course that mirrors the training in the IAU condition. EI providers will also receive access to interactive online exercises and practice activities within the training module. They will have online access to the Free Talk: Group MI for Teens searchable manual and materials via CV-ATOD. Providers may complete an optional CE course following the completion of the training module. EI providers will have access to all EBP implementation tools provided by CV-ATOD. Student providers in the CHOICE EI condition will receive access to CV-ATOD. They will participate in an online training course that mirrors the training in the IAU condition. However, EI providers will also receive access to interactive online exercises and practice activities within the training module. They will have online access to the CHOICE: Group MI for Teens searchable manual and materials via CV-ATOD.
Treatment:
Other: Centervention-ATOD (CV-ATOD)
Implementation As Usual (IAU)
No Intervention group
Description:
CMH providers in the Free Talk IAU condition will receive access to the Group MI for Teens website that provides asynchronous, self-paced training videos as well as downloadable intervention materials and resources. CMH providers in this condition are only required to watch the first two training videos before receiving access to download the Free Talk training manual and materials. Providers may also complete an optional CE course following the completion of all training videos. Student providers in the CHOICE IAU condition will receive access to the Group MI for Teens website that provides online training videos as well as downloadable intervention materials and resources. IAU providers are only required to watch the first two training videos before receiving access to download the CHOICE training manual and materials. Providers may also complete an optional EBP knowledge test following the completion of all training videos.

Trial contacts and locations

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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