Mobile Health for Alcohol Use Disorders in Clinical Practice
Alcohol Drinking, Telemedicine
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Alcohol Drinking focused on measuring implementation, alcohol drinking, mHealth, wellness
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- are 21+ years old,
- interested in learning about ways to reduce drinking,
- willing to download and use A-CHESS,
- lives in within the geographical boundaries of the UW Health system
- be able to understand and sign an electronic consent form in English,
- own an Apple or android smart phone,
- meets the criteria for at risk drinking on the AUDIT screening,
- responds yes to at least one question on the Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) Diagnostic and Statistical Manual-5 survey, and
- indicates in the past week they have had at least 7 drinks and 3 on a single day (women), or had at least 14 drinks and 4 on a single day (men).
Exclusion Criteria:
- has a severe alcohol use disorder (yes to 6+ items on the Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) Diagnostic and Statistical Manual-5)
- have a current psychotic disorder
- have an acute medical problem requiring immediate hospitalization
- have a known terminal illness
Sites / Locations
- UW Health at the American Center
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Active Comparator
Experimental
Experimental
Self monitored
Peer supported
Clinically integrated
Patients of this group will continue receiving regular care from their physician with no interference from the two experimental groups. Patient subjects will download the app on their Android or Apple smart phone that will direct them to external information hosted on the internet that may help reduce their drinking (e.g., NIAAA resources). For the first 12 weeks, once a week patients can set a weekly goal related to their alcohol use or other health related behaviors (e.g., "I will only drink on Friday this week."). At the end of the week subjects will be prompted to take a weekly survey, which will include questions such as a variation of the brief alcohol monitor (BAM) and timeline followback. Patients will then receive feedback on the amount of drinks they had compared to their goal. Then the patient will set a new goal for the following week. Patients will complete quarterly surveys on the A-CHESS app to assess study outcomes.
Patients will be asked to take the same surveys and have the access to the same information as the self-monitoring group. Patient subjects in this group will have access to discussion boards where they can talk to one another and have the ability to share and see stories of other patients. The only involvement of someone other than patients themselves in the peer-supported group will be by a sponsor (i.e., a dedicated user from the area with a sustained history of successful alcohol reduction). The sponsor will participate in discussion groups and encourage use of the system. Patient-reported feedback will be presented directly to the patient.
Patients in the clinically integrated group will receive the same intervention as the peer-supported group aside from three differences: 1) patients have the option to share selected elements of their app data with the University of Wisconsin (UW) Health health coach, 2) the health coach will replace the role of the sponsor in the peer-support group, and 3) patients will have the option to attend an initial 60- to 90-minute and two 30-minute follow-up consultations with the health coach in-person, via phone, or via video chat.