CHERL, Connecting Primary Care Patients With Community Resources to Facilitate Behavior Change
Tobacco Use DisorderAlcohol Abuse2 moreThe investigators want to find out if providing a Community Health Educator Referral Liaison (CHERL) helps practices help their patients change risky behaviors (tobacco use, physical inactivity, unhealthy diet, and risky drinking) by connecting patients to available services in the community or directly providing behavior change support.
Development of an Intervention to Reduce Heavy Drinking and Improve HIV Care Engagement Among Fisherfolk...
Alcohol Use DisorderHIV-infection/AidsFisherfolk are a high risk population for HIV and are prioritized to receive antiretroviral treatment (ART) in Uganda, but risky alcohol use among fisherfolk is a barrier to HIV care engagement; multilevel factors influence alcohol use and poor access to HIV care in fishing villages, including a lack of motivation, social support, access to savings accounts, and access to HIV clinics. This project aims to address these barriers, and subsequently reduce heavy alcohol use and increase engagement in HIV care, through an intervention in which counselors provide individual and group counseling to increase motivation, while also addressing structural barriers to care through increased opportunities for savings and increased social support. This may be a feasible approach to help this hard-to-reach population reduce drinking and increase access care, which could ultimately reduce mortality rates, improve treatment outcomes, and through its effect on HIV viral load, decrease the likelihood of transmitting HIV to others.
Brief Interventions in General Hospital (BIG)
AlcoholismAlcohol abuse is a widespread concern internationally with a significant threat to world health. Research suggests a relationship between heavy drinking and certain clinical presentations such as injuries, physical and psychiatric illnesses and frequent sickness absence from employment. This research aims to establish whether brief interventions delivered to harmful and hazardous alcohol drinkers admitted to hospital impacts of their alcohol consumption levels on discharge from hospital.
Gut Hormones in Obesity, Nicotine and Alcohol Dependence
ObesitySmoking Cessation1 moreThe "Gut Hormones in Addiction" study is a proof-of-concept experimental medicine human study to answer the following questions: Does the administration of the hormone desacyl ghrelin reduce core behavioural components of addiction in dependent individuals who have recently stopped smoking tobacco or drinking alcohol, or overweight/obese subjects? Does the administration of the drug Exenatide reduce core behavioural components of addiction in dependent individuals who have recently stopped smoking tobacco or drinking alcohol, or overweight/obese subjects? Does the administration of desacyl ghrelin or Exenatide reduce reward responses to high-calorie foods and appetite in dependent individuals who have recently stopped smoking tobacco or drinking alcohol, or overweight/obese subjects?
Brain-imaging and Adolescent Neuroscience Consortium
Alcohol AbuseThis is a multi-site study of adolescents 12-21 years-of-age to evaluate the long and shorter-term effect of adolescent alcohol use on the developing brain.
Disulfiram as a Modulator of Amyloid Precursor Protein-processing
Alcohol AddictionA causal therapeutic approach for treatment of Alzheimer's disease has not been established so far. The protein ADAM10 represents a promising target for an A-beta peptide preventing strategy. Treatment of human neuronal cells with Disulfiram, a drug which is used in clinical routine for recrudescence prevention of alcohol dependency, revealed an increased expression of ADAM10. This finding indicates a neuroprotective potential of Disulfiram. The investigators' research purpose aims at the verification of the results obtained in cell culture experiments in the human organism. Therefore, include alcohol addicted patients were included, which take the drug Disulfiram for recrudescence prevention, in our study. Patients are recruited from the patient-collective of the University Medical Center Mainz and the Central Institute for Mental Health Mannheim. Blood samples (max. 5 ml) are taken from the participants before the intake of Disulfiram and about two weeks after treatment. Demographic data are collected (such as age or onset of addiction). Gene expression is analyzed via reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction(RT-PCR) from blood cell-derived messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA).
Mental Health and Well-being of People Who Seek Help From Their Member of Parliament
Common Mental DisordersAlcohol Use DisorderThis is an observational study to assess the prevalence of common mental disorders and alcohol use disorders in a population of individuals seeking help from their Member of Parliament (MP) in the UK.
Monitoring Telemedicine Platform in Patients With Anxiety Symptoms and Alcohol Use Disorder
Anxiety DisordersAlcohol Use Disorder1 moreThe objective of this study is to analyze the physiological patterns of two groups of patients, one control and one with anxiety disorder and alcoholic abuse disorder using sensor data from mobile devices and wearables. This data will be compared to the data presented by three clinical questionnaires: State-trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT), and the Beck's Depression Inventory (BDI-II) in order to determine the feasibility of remote collected data.
Isolated During COVID-19: Effects of COVID-19's Social Restrictions on Loneliness and Psychosocial...
LonelinessDepression3 moreThis study seeks to gather data and insight on epidemiologic trends of loneliness and other behaviors in the wake of the CDC recommended "social distancing" during the COVID-19 pandemic. The objective of this study is to use a cross-sectional survey to assess the impact of COVID-19's associated recommendations (social distancing, self-isolation, and self-quarantine) on loneliness and psychosocial symptomatology (depression, anxiety, substance abuse) on young adults (18-35 years old).
Alcohol and Women : Screening in General
AlcoholismThe alcohol consumption of adults has been decreasing in France since the sixties. When focusing on the particular case of women, this trend goes on the opposite direction. In addition, the impact of drinking alcohol involves an increased severity in women in comparison to men. Furthermore, women consult less often doctors about their alcohol problem due to stigmatisation. Finally, as alcohol consumption is a major public health issue (second preventable cause of death), the aim of this study is to propose an earlier screening of women with alcohol use disorders (AUD) in general medicine.