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Assertive Community Treatment for alcohol dependence (ACTAD): study protocol for a randomised controlled trial

Assertive Community Treatment for alcohol dependence (ACTAD): study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
Assertive Community Treatment for alcohol dependence (ACTAD): study protocol for a randomised controlled trial

BACKGROUND: Alcohol dependence is a significant and costly problem in the UK yet only 6% of people a year receive treatment. Current service provision based on the treatment of acute episodes of illness and emphasising personal choice and motivation results in a small proportion of these patients engaging with alcohol treatment. There is a need for interventions targeted at the population of alcohol dependent patients who are hard to engage in conventional treatment. Assertive Community Treatment (ACT), a model of care based on assertive outreach, has been used for treating patients with severe mental illnesses and presents a promising avenue for engaging patients with primary alcohol dependence. So far there has been little research on this.

METHODS/DESIGN: In this single blind exploratory randomised controlled trial, a total of 90 alcohol dependent participants will be recruited from community addiction services. After completing a baseline assessment, they will be assigned to one of two conditions: (1) ACT plus care as usual, or (2) care as usual. Those allocated to the ACT plus care as usual will receive the same treatment that is routinely provided by services, plus a trained key worker who will provide ACT. ACT comprises intensive and assertive contact at least once a week, over 50% of contacts in the participant's home or local community, and comprehensive case management across social and health care, for a period of one year. All participants will be followed up at 6 months and 12 months to assess outcome post randomisation. The primary outcome measures will be alcohol consumption: mean drinks per drinking day and percentage of days abstinent measured by the Time Line Follow Back interview. Secondary outcome measures will include severity of alcohol dependence, alcohol related problems, motivation to change, social network involvement, quality of life, therapeutic relationship and service use. Other outcome variables are treatment engagement including completion of assessment, detoxification and aftercare.

DISCUSSION: Results of this trial will help clarify the potential beneficial effects of ACT for people with alcohol dependence and provide information to design a definitive trial.

TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN: ISRCTN22775534.

Alcohol Drinking, Alcoholics, Alcoholism, Case Management, Community Mental Health Services, Community-Institutional Relations, England, Feasibility Studies, Humans, Motivation, Quality of Life, Recurrence, Research Design, Single-Blind Method, Social Support, Substance Abuse Treatment Centers, Temperance, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Journal Article, Multicenter Study, Randomized Controlled Trial, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
1745-6215
Gilburt, Helen
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Burns, Tom
e9e49214-6bbb-43ce-b39f-0d814abbc83e
Copello, Alex
2c5bbe0a-1888-433d-a718-e7f1f8095c9f
Coulton, Simon
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Crawford, Michael
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Day, Ed
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Deluca, Paolo
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Godfrey, Christine
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Parrott, Steve
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Rose, Abigail K.
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Sinclair, Julia M.A.
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Wright, Christine
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Drummond, Colin
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Gilburt, Helen
6ec8da9a-2a47-4b07-bd41-0d3a11ee7103
Burns, Tom
e9e49214-6bbb-43ce-b39f-0d814abbc83e
Copello, Alex
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Coulton, Simon
5f87f257-7f3e-4f62-b4e5-7dd8c31722e2
Crawford, Michael
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Day, Ed
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Deluca, Paolo
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Godfrey, Christine
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Parrott, Steve
9fcc1a2f-eae7-40d8-a795-3a96172018df
Rose, Abigail K.
bbb089bf-e24a-48df-9a19-3729eb46916d
Sinclair, Julia M.A.
be3e54d5-c6da-4950-b0ba-3cb8cdcab13c
Wright, Christine
7a5b5704-5ab5-44d6-a5d5-04e106ec4c97
Drummond, Colin
87227d1b-4253-42b7-9ee4-f9ac7c7d37b3

Gilburt, Helen, Burns, Tom, Copello, Alex, Coulton, Simon, Crawford, Michael, Day, Ed, Deluca, Paolo, Godfrey, Christine, Parrott, Steve, Rose, Abigail K., Sinclair, Julia M.A., Wright, Christine and Drummond, Colin (2012) Assertive Community Treatment for alcohol dependence (ACTAD): study protocol for a randomised controlled trial. Trials, 13 (19). (doi:10.1186/1745-6215-13-19).

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Alcohol dependence is a significant and costly problem in the UK yet only 6% of people a year receive treatment. Current service provision based on the treatment of acute episodes of illness and emphasising personal choice and motivation results in a small proportion of these patients engaging with alcohol treatment. There is a need for interventions targeted at the population of alcohol dependent patients who are hard to engage in conventional treatment. Assertive Community Treatment (ACT), a model of care based on assertive outreach, has been used for treating patients with severe mental illnesses and presents a promising avenue for engaging patients with primary alcohol dependence. So far there has been little research on this.

METHODS/DESIGN: In this single blind exploratory randomised controlled trial, a total of 90 alcohol dependent participants will be recruited from community addiction services. After completing a baseline assessment, they will be assigned to one of two conditions: (1) ACT plus care as usual, or (2) care as usual. Those allocated to the ACT plus care as usual will receive the same treatment that is routinely provided by services, plus a trained key worker who will provide ACT. ACT comprises intensive and assertive contact at least once a week, over 50% of contacts in the participant's home or local community, and comprehensive case management across social and health care, for a period of one year. All participants will be followed up at 6 months and 12 months to assess outcome post randomisation. The primary outcome measures will be alcohol consumption: mean drinks per drinking day and percentage of days abstinent measured by the Time Line Follow Back interview. Secondary outcome measures will include severity of alcohol dependence, alcohol related problems, motivation to change, social network involvement, quality of life, therapeutic relationship and service use. Other outcome variables are treatment engagement including completion of assessment, detoxification and aftercare.

DISCUSSION: Results of this trial will help clarify the potential beneficial effects of ACT for people with alcohol dependence and provide information to design a definitive trial.

TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN: ISRCTN22775534.

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Published date: 20 February 2012
Keywords: Alcohol Drinking, Alcoholics, Alcoholism, Case Management, Community Mental Health Services, Community-Institutional Relations, England, Feasibility Studies, Humans, Motivation, Quality of Life, Recurrence, Research Design, Single-Blind Method, Social Support, Substance Abuse Treatment Centers, Temperance, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Journal Article, Multicenter Study, Randomized Controlled Trial, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 416062
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/416062
ISSN: 1745-6215
PURE UUID: 845b6f41-23d0-47dc-9a08-4d4a9be12d22
ORCID for Julia M.A. Sinclair: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1905-2025

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Date deposited: 01 Dec 2017 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:55

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Contributors

Author: Helen Gilburt
Author: Tom Burns
Author: Alex Copello
Author: Simon Coulton
Author: Michael Crawford
Author: Ed Day
Author: Paolo Deluca
Author: Christine Godfrey
Author: Steve Parrott
Author: Abigail K. Rose
Author: Christine Wright
Author: Colin Drummond

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