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用于测试拉丁裔急诊患者酒精使用障碍的双语数字健康工具的试验研究设计。

Trial study design to test a bilingual digital health tool for alcohol use disorders among Latino emergency department patients.

机构信息

Yale School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, 464 Congress Avenue, Suite 260, New Haven, CT 06519, United States of America.

Yale School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, 464 Congress Avenue, Suite 260, New Haven, CT 06519, United States of America; Yale School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Section of Emergency Medicine, 100 York St, Suite 1F, New Haven, CT 06511, United States of America.

出版信息

Contemp Clin Trials. 2020 Sep;96:106104. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2020.106104. Epub 2020 Aug 7.

Abstract

We describe an emergency department (ED)-based, Latino patient focused, unblinded, randomized controlled trial to empirically test if automated bilingual computerized alcohol screening and brief intervention (AB-CASI), a digital health tool, is superior to standard care (SC) on measures of alcohol consumption, alcohol-related negative behaviors and consequences, and 30-day treatment engagement. The trial design addresses the full spectrum of unhealthy drinking from high-risk drinking to severe alcohol use disorder (AUD). In an effort to surmount known ED-based alcohol screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment process barriers, while addressing racial/ethnic alcohol-related health disparities among Latino groups, this trial will purposively use a digital health tool and seek enrollment of English and/or Spanish speaking self-identified adult Latino ED patients. Participants will be randomized (1:1) to AB-CASI or SC, stratified by AUD severity and preferred language (English vs. Spanish). The primary outcome will be the number of binge drinking days assessed using the 28-day timeline followback method at 12 months post-randomization. Secondary outcomes will include mean number of drinks/week and number of episodes of driving impaired, riding with an impaired driver, injuries, arrests, and tardiness and days absent from work/school. A sample size of 820 is necessary to provide 80% power to detect a 1.14 difference between AB-CASI and SC in the primary outcome. Showing efficacy of this promising bilingual ED-based brief intervention tool in Latino patients has the potential to widely and efficiently expand prevention efforts and facilitate meaningful contact with specialized treatment services.

摘要

我们描述了一项基于急诊科、针对拉丁裔患者、非盲、随机对照试验,旨在通过实证检验自动化双语计算机酒精筛查和简短干预(AB-CASI)——一种数字健康工具——在衡量饮酒量、与酒精相关的负面行为和后果以及 30 天治疗参与度方面是否优于标准护理(SC)。该试验设计涵盖了从高风险饮酒到严重酒精使用障碍(AUD)的所有不健康饮酒范围。为了克服已知的急诊科酒精筛查、简短干预和转介治疗过程中的障碍,同时解决拉丁裔群体中与种族/族裔相关的酒精健康差距问题,本试验将有针对性地使用数字健康工具,并招募会说英语和/或西班牙语的自我认同的成年拉丁裔急诊科患者。参与者将按照 1:1 的比例随机分配到 AB-CASI 或 SC 组,按 AUD 严重程度和首选语言(英语与西班牙语)分层。主要结局将是在随机分组后 12 个月使用 28 天时间线回溯法评估的 binge drinking 天数。次要结局将包括每周平均饮酒量和醉酒驾车、与醉酒司机同车、受伤、逮捕以及迟到和缺勤天数。需要 820 名参与者才能有 80%的功效来检测 AB-CASI 和 SC 在主要结局上的 1.14 差异。证明这种有前途的双语急诊科简短干预工具在拉丁裔患者中的疗效有可能广泛而有效地扩大预防工作,并促进与专门治疗服务的有意义接触。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/dd06/8252296/aa58a421c464/nihms-1620912-f0001.jpg

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Alcohol use disorders.酒精使用障碍。
Lancet. 2019 Aug 31;394(10200):781-792. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(19)31775-1.

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