Computer-based Intervention for Alcohol-using HIV/HCV+ Women
Status: | Recruiting |
---|---|
Conditions: | HIV / AIDS, HIV / AIDS, HIV / AIDS, Psychiatric, Hepatitis |
Therapuetic Areas: | Immunology / Infectious Diseases, Psychiatry / Psychology |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 18 - 40 |
Updated: | 3/3/2019 |
Start Date: | January 3, 2018 |
End Date: | February 29, 2020 |
Contact: | Ralph J Diclemente, PhD |
Email: | rjd438@nyu.edu |
Phone: | 212-992-3709 |
Computer-based Alcohol Reduction Intervention for Alcohol-using HIV/HCV+ Russian Women in Clinical Care
The study will harness the multidisciplinary expertise to adapt an effective alcohol
reduction computer-based intervention, called CBT4CBT, to enhance its appropriateness for
HIV/HCV co-infected women and evaluate its efficacy. The intervention, if effective, may be
an efficient and cost-effective alcohol reduction strategy, that is scalable and can be
readily disseminated and integrated in clinical care at other AIDS Centres in Russia to
enhance women's health and reduce HIV/HCV transmission risk.
reduction computer-based intervention, called CBT4CBT, to enhance its appropriateness for
HIV/HCV co-infected women and evaluate its efficacy. The intervention, if effective, may be
an efficient and cost-effective alcohol reduction strategy, that is scalable and can be
readily disseminated and integrated in clinical care at other AIDS Centres in Russia to
enhance women's health and reduce HIV/HCV transmission risk.
Women co-infected with human immunodeficiency viruses (HIV) and Hepatitis C (HCV) are at
elevated risk for adverse health outcomes associated with alcohol use. Evidence-based alcohol
reduction interventions for this vulnerable population are limited. To address this gap, the
proposed study will harness the multidisciplinary expertise and experience of collaborative
Russian-U.S. research team to adapt an effective computer-based intervention, called CBT4CBT,
to enhance its appropriateness for HIV/HCV co-infected women and evaluate its efficacy. The
proposed study will be conducted in three sequential stages: (1) Adaptation, (2)
Implementation, and (3) Evaluation. Participants will be randomized to one of two conditions:
(1) adapted computer-based alcohol reduction intervention, or (2) standard-of-care control
condition. The proposed trial design and analysis provide an appropriate conceptual and
methodological framework to assess the efficacy of the adapted computer-based intervention.
The intervention, if effective, may be an efficient and cost-effective alcohol reduction
strategy that is scalable and can be readily disseminated and integrated in clinical care at
other AIDS Centres in Russia to enhance women's health and reduce HIV/HCV transmission risk.
elevated risk for adverse health outcomes associated with alcohol use. Evidence-based alcohol
reduction interventions for this vulnerable population are limited. To address this gap, the
proposed study will harness the multidisciplinary expertise and experience of collaborative
Russian-U.S. research team to adapt an effective computer-based intervention, called CBT4CBT,
to enhance its appropriateness for HIV/HCV co-infected women and evaluate its efficacy. The
proposed study will be conducted in three sequential stages: (1) Adaptation, (2)
Implementation, and (3) Evaluation. Participants will be randomized to one of two conditions:
(1) adapted computer-based alcohol reduction intervention, or (2) standard-of-care control
condition. The proposed trial design and analysis provide an appropriate conceptual and
methodological framework to assess the efficacy of the adapted computer-based intervention.
The intervention, if effective, may be an efficient and cost-effective alcohol reduction
strategy that is scalable and can be readily disseminated and integrated in clinical care at
other AIDS Centres in Russia to enhance women's health and reduce HIV/HCV transmission risk.
Inclusion Criteria:
- female;
- receiving HIV medical care at the AIDS Center;
- chart-documented HIV and chronic HCV infection;
- currently prescribed an antiretroviral (ARV) regimen;
- medically, cognitively, and psychologically capable of study participation;
- laboratory-confirmed recent alcohol use as detected by a PEth analysis.
We found this trial at
2
sites
3251 3rd Avenue North
Saint Petersburg, 19737
Saint Petersburg, 19737
Phone: +7 (812) 233-34-83
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70 Washington Square S
New York, New York 10012
New York, New York 10012
(212) 998-1212
Phone: 212-992-3709
New York University More than 175 years ago, Albert Gallatin, the distinguished statesman who served...
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