Effect of Mobile Phone Addiction With Forward Head Posture on Pain and Cervical Functions
Forward Head Postureto investigate the effect of mobile phone addiction with forward head posture on the endurance of deep neck flexor muscles, respiratory functions, pain pressure threshold , and neck functional disability level.
Strengthening Community Addiction Services in Vietnam
AddictionOpioidThis study aims to develop and test an intervention to enhance the addiction service continuum with the joint effort of commune health workers and family members of people who use drugs in Vietnam.
Pilot Study of Contingency Management for Smoking Cessation
SmokingTobacco Smoking5 moreThe purpose of this study is to see whether contingency management (CM) can be successfully added as an adjunct treatment to standard stop smoking services in outpatients undergoing treatment for opiate addiction. Forty tobacco smoking patients undergoing treatment for opiate addiction will be stratified to a CM intervention for either smoking abstinence or attendance at the clinic, whilst also receiving usual stop smoking services cessation treatment. The intervention will run for five weeks and participants will be followed up six months after the beginning of the study.
Testing the Effectiveness of a Graphic Novel Health Education Curriculum for Patients With Addiction...
Alcohol UseDrug UseThis study deploys a strategy to develop and evaluate a training-efficient, multimedia patient-centered Health Education Toolkit to promote shared decision making between counselors and patients. An existing evidence-based toolkit intervention will be adapted and redesigned by a patient and provider team into an engaging, narrative graphic novel curriculum useful in group and individual counseling. The proven behavioral interventions will be augmented with health education material focused on medication assisted treatment (MAT). We will assess feasibility and acceptability, and pilot test whether exposure to the Toolkit (TK) can shared decision making conversations, reduce substance use, and increase engagement with MAT.
YATEP - The Impact of Horse Assisted Therapy (HAT) on Treatment Outcomes
AddictionThe objective of the study is to assess the impact of horse assisted therapy (HAT) on: Addiction treatment outcomes (its effectiveness as an alternative therapy) Addiction treatment dropout & addiction relapse (its efficacy in preventing dropout). Hypothesis: HAT will correlate with: beneficial treatment outcomes of depression, anxiety, aggression with improved self esteem & motivation lower treatment dropout & addiction relapse.
Study to Evaluate the Exposures of Lofexidine and Its Major Metabolites in Subjects Seeking Buprenorphine...
Substance Withdrawal SyndromeOpiate Addiction1 moreThe purpose of this study is to evaluate the relative exposures of lofexidine and its major metabolites in subjects seeking buprenorphine dose reduction.
Adaptive Treatment for Adolescent Cannabis Use Disorders
Mental DisordersAddictive Behaviors1 moreThe purpose of this study is to examine an Adaptive Treatment approach in order to improve outcomes of youth with Cannabis Use Disorders who are poor responders to treatment.
Personal Vaporizer vs Cigalike
Cigarette AddictionThis is a pilot study to compare efficiency and tolerability of a personal vaporizers (PV) new generation electronic cigarette loaded with nicotine e-liquid with cigalike new generation electronic cigarette loaded with nicotine and usual smoking habits, in a group of well characterized regular smokers unwilling to quit.
Impact of Exercise and Affirmations (IntenSati) on Addiction-related Cognitive and Psychosocial...
Drug DependenceAlcohol DependenceAddiction to illicit and prescribed drugs, alcohol and tobacco is associated with a panoply of brain changes that contribute to structural and micro-structural deficits, altered metabolism and neurotransmission, and related cognitive deficits affecting executive function, decision-making, reward salience and motivation. Many of these deficits may act as barriers to recovery, compromising the same spectrum of cognitive processes that established interventions (motivational enhancement, cognitive behavioral therapy, therapeutic communities, etc.) depend on for successful outcomes. Even where there are medications that target a specific addiction (e.g., methadone for opiates), meaningful, sustained recovery relies on the acquisition of adaptive skills and strategies. As such, there is a need to develop interventions for substance use disorders that have the potential to improve health and cognitive and psychosocial functioning, and to be embraced by the treatment community. A growing body of basic and clinical research suggests that physical exercise may reduce drug use and improve cognitive-executive function, mood, and motivation. There is also a growing literature on the effectiveness of positive affirmation as a cognitive-behavioral intervention for depression and PTSD both of which frequently co-occur with addiction. Building on this, we hypothesize that a combined exercise and affirmation intervention (IntenSati) will lead to improved cognitive and psychosocial function. To test this, we propose to conduct a two-arm randomized clinical trial - in adult volunteers with a history of longstanding substance use and who are in treatment in a residential therapeutic community setting (Odyssey House) - to examine cognitive and psychosocial function before, during, and after randomization to either a twelve-week IntenSati intervention condition or to a twelve-week no-exercise/no-affirmations control condition. This is a pilot study intended to collect data on feasibility and effect size. The population and sample size were selected on the basis of likelihood to benefit from the intervention, likelihood for good adherence, and the realities of completing a low-cost pilot study within a one-year timeframe. Overall there were no substantial differences between IntenSati and TAU on measures of cognition, mood, and psychosocial functioning. Limitations include the small sample size, limited exercise intensity and capacity, missed exercise classes, dropout because of placement, work schedules and non-study-related medical conditions.
A Pilot Trial of Dextroamphetamine for Methamphetamine Dependence
Methamphetamine AddictionThe purpose of this study is to assess the safety and effectiveness dextroamphetamine to help methamphetamine users quit or cut down on their use. The study lasts for 9 weeks. Eligible participants will attend research visits twice per week, and will receive individual counseling sessions once per week for all 9 weeks. 50% of the participants will receive the active medication while the other 50% will receive the placebo (sugar pill). Neither the participant or the study team will know if the participant is receiving the placebo or active drug.