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Active clinical trials for "Opioid-Related Disorders"

Results 851-860 of 1134

Repeated-dose Brief Intervention to Reduce Overdose and Risk Behaviors Among Naloxone Recipients...

Opioid-Related DisordersDrug Overdose

REBOOT is a pilot randomized trial of a repeated-dose brief intervention to reduce overdose and risk behaviors among naloxone recipients (REBOOT). It includes an established overdose education curriculum within an Informational-Motivation-Behavior (IMB) model. This study will test the feasibility of an efficacy trial of REBOOT vs treatment as usual (information and referrals) that will evaluate overdose events (non-fatal or death), drug use cessation, and overdose and HIV risk behaviors, among opioid-dependent persons who have previously overdosed and already received take-home naloxone (the opioid antagonist used to reverse overdose).

Completed10 enrollment criteria

RESPECT-PLUS: Services for Infants With Prenatal Opiate Exposure

Opioid Use DisorderNeonatal Abstinence Syndrome3 more

The impact of parental opioid use disorder and other substance use exposure on child welfare and the healthcare system is undeniable. Between 2000 and 2009, the number of delivering mothers using or dependent on opiates rose nearly five-fold, and it is estimated that 48-94% of children exposed to opioids in utero will be diagnosed with neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS), a set of behavioral and physiological complications resulting from abrupt substance withdrawal at birth. Opioid abuse is usually coupled with use of other substances, and research has demonstrated that children born to parents with substance use disorders are three to four times more likely to suffer abuse or neglect. Currently, the standard of care for pregnant women who are being treated for opiate dependence at Boston Medical Center (BMC) is to receive all their prenatal care in the RESPECT Clinic, an innovative program of the BMC Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology designed to treat addiction during the prenatal and early postnatal period. Once the child is born, BMC staff files a report of suspected child abuse and neglect in accordance with the Massachusetts General Laws section 51A. The state Department of Children and Families makes a determination regarding the disposition of these families. Medically, most of these children are treated in-patient at BMC for NAS and then discharged to follow-up with routine pediatric primary care. Currently, approximately 85% of infants born exposed to opioids go home with their mothers, and the remainder receive substitute care, either with other family members or via foster care. This investigation is a randomized controlled trial of RESPECT-Plus, a continuum of promising and evidence-based practices designed to strengthen family protective factors and improve health permanency and well-being outcomes for children born to mothers in treatment for opioid use disorder. Anticipated outcomes of the intervention include fewer reports of supported child abuse or neglect filings in the child's first year of life, fewer days in out-of-home placement; fewer terminations of parental rights in the child's first year of life; and improvements in family functions overall (e.g. improved access to basic needs/social determinants of health, improved parental resilience, and decreased maternal depression).

Completed17 enrollment criteria

Change the Cycle: An RCT to Prevent Injection Initiation

Substance AbuseIntravenous5 more

The study will test the efficacy of a hour long, one-on-one, active listening counseling session (called Change the Cycle or CTC) aimed at reducing behaviors among active people who inject drugs (PWID) that research has found to facilitate uptake of injection drug use among non-injectors. The study will involve ~1,100 PWID who will be randomized to CTC or an equal attention control intervention on improving nutrition. Participants will be recruited in Los Angeles and San Francisco, California and followed up at 6 and 12 months to determine changes in direct and indirect facilitation of injection initiation among non-injectors.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Neurobiology of Opioid Dependence: 5 - 5

Opioid-Related Disorders

The purpose of this study is to determine the effect of acute naltrexone pretreatment on the response to yohimbine in healthy volunteers.

Withdrawn1 enrollment criteria

Buprenorphine/Naloxone Treatment for Opioid Dependence-Experiment 1 - 1

Heroin DependenceOpioid-Related Disorders

The purpose of this study is to assess the clinical efficacy of the buprenorphine/naloxone combination tablet for alternate-day dosing and determine whether multiples of the daily dose are necessary to maintain an effective alternate day dosing regimen.

Withdrawn2 enrollment criteria

Buprenorphine vs Buprenorphine/Naloxone on the Effects of Maternal Symptomatology

Opioid-use Disorder

This study will assesses the efficacy of buprenorphine/naloxone vs buprenorphine on maternal withdrawal symptoms and drug cravings. This is a randomized controlled trial to a cohort of pregnant women seeking medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorders. Half of participants will receive buprenorphine, while the other half of participants receive a combination of buprenorphine/naloxone

Withdrawn7 enrollment criteria

Fathering In Recovery

ParentingOpioid-use Disorder2 more

The majority of men experiencing opioid use disorder and receiving treatment are fathers. Substance use, transitions between in-patient and out-patient treatment, and reunification as a family, all create considerable strain and are predictive of a host of negative long-term outcomes including increased rates of relapse for fathers and elevated risk for behavioral, emotional, and substance use problems in their children. Evidence-based parenting interventions for fathers are lacking in general, yet are exceedingly rare for fathers participating in opioid use disorder treatment, even though the extant research literature suggests the integration of services is not only timely but may help engage and retain fathers in treatment and produce protective factors for children. The goal of this project is to develop and evaluate a prototype of a usable innovative web-based program that integrates existing evidence-based parenting programs, yet tailored specifically to fathers with opioid use disorder and designed for the opioid treatment context in order to promote the implementation and dissemination of father specific empirically-supported treatment.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Reducing High School Athletes' Prescription Opioids Misuse and Diversion Through the Student Athlete...

Prescription Opioid Misuse

The goal of this study is to prevent prescription opioid misuse among high school athletes by developing, demonstrating the feasibility, and evaluating the outcomes of an innovative digital intervention.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Toward Zero Prescribed Opioids for Outpatient General Surgery

Opioid Misuse and AddictionPain

Investigators have created an opioid reduction "package" which includes patient education, non-narcotic pain control instructions, and limited (or no) opioid pain prescriptions provided at discharge in an attempt to reduce the number of opioid consumption after outpatient general surgery.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

A Tailored, Peer-delivered Intervention to Reduce Recurring Opioid Overdoses

Drug OverdoseOpioid-Related Disorders3 more

This project will further develop and test the Tailored Telephone Intervention delivered by Peers to Prevent Recurring Opioid Overdoses (TTIP-PRO), a promising, low-cost, intervention to facilitate entry into medication assisted treatment (MAT) for individuals experiencing a non-fatal opioid overdoses (OOD). A prior small-scale pilot/feasibility study of TTIP-PRO (NCT02282306) found that the participating patients and the Peer Interventionists were satisfied with their participation, the intervention was acceptable, and the system for generating patient-tailored intervention information performed well. The overall goal of the present study is to conduct a pilot randomized controlled trial of TTIP-PRO versus a control group. It is hypothesized that patients in the TTIP-PRO group will have more favorable drug-abuse-related outcomes than patients in the control group.

Completed12 enrollment criteria
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