Effectiveness of a Case Management Intervention for Alcohol Use-Related Problems in Frequent Users of an Emergency Department
NCT04219748 · Status: TERMINATED · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 11
Last updated 2021-05-17
Summary
Alcohol use and its consequences represent an important public health problem. As well as alcohol dependence, hazardous drinking also contributes to a high burden in terms of morbidity and mortality. To improve these patients' prognosis and decrease associated social and health care costs, it is necessary to increase early detection, intervention and treatment for these problems. Alcohol consumption is associated with a decrease in primary care services utilization, thus Emergency Departments (EDs) are a primary gateway to healthcare services in this group.
Depending on the investigative method and the mixture of the target population, an estimated 0.6-40% of all ED visits are due to alcohol-related problems. Given this, EDs offer a unique window of opportunity to address alcohol problems.
The threshold most commonly used to define frequent use of EDs is more than 4 visits per year. Frequent users comprise 0.3% to 10% of all ED patients and account for 3.5% to 28% of ED visits in developed countries. Addictive and other psychiatric disorders, and also social vulnerability are more common in frequent ED users than in non-frequent users. Although case management interventions seem promising to reduce ED attendance among frequent users, currently there is mixed evidence on the effects of such interventions on ED use.
Considering all this, a broader understanding of interventions to reduce frequent visits is needed, specially focusing on local frequent ED populations and identified highly vulnerable subgroups, such as hazardous drinkers.
The investigators aim to evaluate the effectiveness of a Case Management programme for ED Frequent Users presenting risky alcohol use in the ED of a tertiary hospital.
Conditions
- Alcohol Drinking
- Alcohol-Related Disorders
Interventions
- BEHAVIORAL
-
Case Management
Participants will receive an intensive Case Management (CM) intervention conducted by a multidisciplinary team (Psychiatry, Social Work, Nursing) during 2 months. The intervention will encompass attending weekly or biweekly appointments with the CM team, the interviews will last approximately 30 minutes. This CM intervention will include referral to Hospital Clínic de Barcelona Addiction Outpatient Clinic and a personalised assessment of the medical, psychiatric and social situation of each individual by the CM team. An individualised care plan will be established and periodically reviewed by the multidisciplinary team in response to a better understanding of patient needs or to a change in patient health condition. The intervention will offer motivational interviewing psychotherapy to enhance motivation to reduce or to quit alcohol use, in crisis intervention, coordination of care, patient education and self-management support, and assistance to navigate in the healthcare system.
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
Hospital Clinic of Barcelona
lead OTHER
Principal Investigators
-
Antoni Gual, PhD, MD · Hospital Clinic of Barcelona
Study Design
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Purpose
- TREATMENT
- Masking
- NONE
- Model
- PARALLEL
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 18 Years
- Max Age
- 65 Years
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2020-01-20
- Primary Completion
- 2021-02-28
- Completion
- 2021-02-28
Countries
- Spain
Study Locations
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