The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of a collaborative care intervention for evidence based management of alcohol use disorders in primary care settings within the Veterans Administration Puget Sound Health Care System (Seattle and American Lake Divisions). The study will test whether patients offered the collaborative care intervention have fewer heavy drinking days at 12 months follow-up and to be abstinent or drinking below recommended limits without problems.
The proposed study will evaluate the effectiveness of a collaborative care intervention for evidence-based management of alcohol use disorders in primary care settings. The investigators will specifically test whether patients offered Collaborative Care: Have fewer heavy drinking days at 12 months follow-up; and Are more likely to be abstinent or drinking below recommended limits without problems at 12 months follow-up. Research Design: The study is a randomized controlled encouragement trial. Consenting patients who complete all baseline assessments will be randomized to be offered the Collaborative Care (CC) intervention or receive Usual Care and will be assessed prospectively. Due to the powerful effect of alcohol assessments on drinking behavior, a cohort of men identified through VISTA/CPRS queries as being potentially eligible for the study will be followed electronically for the following year. A random 25% sample of these men will serve as a "no contact control group" and will have no contact with the study. The remaining 75% will be eligible for screening and recruitment. Methodology The study will enroll up to 400 subjects (age \< 65 years) with probable alcohol use disorders, in order to randomize 300 subjects who complete all baseline assessments. Eligibility criteria include a recent AUDIT-C screening score ≥ 5, phone number available in CPRS, and frequent heavy drinking days in the past four weeks (≥ 5 drinks for men, ≥4 drinks for women). The CC intervention will consist of offering subjects: 1) an in-depth baseline assessment, 2) frequent (weekly first, then monthly) visits with a nurse care manager, 3) alcohol dependence medications prescribed by a Nurse Practitioner. An interdisciplinary CC team will supervise nurse care managers weekly. All enrolled participants will have telephone surveys at baseline, 3 months and 12 months; and lab testing at baseline and 12 months. Main study outcomes include: 1) number of heavy drinking days in the past four weeks, and 2) abstinence or drinking below recommended limits at 12 months. Secondary analyses will compare CC and Usual Care groups on process measures of engagement in alcohol-related care, secondary drinking outcomes, laboratory markers, health-related quality of life, health care utilization, and health care costs. For the observational cohort, secondary analyses will compare drinking behaviors (AUDIT-C scores), alcohol-related diagnoses, and health care utilization between men who have no contact with study procedures and other subgroups who are eligible for screening and recruitment. The investigators hypothesize that subjects in the intervention group will decrease their frequency of heavy drinking and will be more likely to be abstinent or drinking below recommended limits at 12 months follow-up.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
304
See description of Intervention arm
Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute
Seattle, Washington, United States
1) number of heavy drinking days
Time frame: at 12 months
2) abstinence or drinking below recommended limits without problems
Time frame: at 12 months
Engagement in alcohol-related care
Time frame: 12-months
secondary drinking outcomes and laboratory markers
Time frame: 12-months
health-related quality of life
Time frame: 12-months
health care utilization
Time frame: 12-months
health care costs
Time frame: 12-months
Outcomes 1-7 listed above and secondary drinking, readiness to change, and engagement outcomes.
Time frame: at 3-months
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